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WKRG Mobile Pensacola: More Oil Washes Up In Gulf Shores

WLOX Biloxi: Oil still washes up on Hancock County beaches

AP: Scientists: Gulf oil Not Gone, 80 pct Remains Underwater


AP: La. fishermen wrinkle their noses at 'smell tests'

"Even the people who make their living off the seafood-rich waters of Louisiana's St. Bernard Parish have a hard time swallowing the government's assurances that fish harvested in the shallow, muddy waters just offshore must be safe to eat because they don't smell too bad.

"Fresh splotches of chocolate-colored crude, probably globules broken apart by toxic chemical dispersants sprayed by BP with government approval, still wash up almost daily on protective boom and in marshes in reopened fishing grounds east of the Mississippi River."

Biloxi Press-Register: Mississippi Sierra Club chief says oil spill far from over; DMR chief says produce the evidence
"“We had a meeting Wednesday night where we had over 150 shrimpers… who are saying there is oil out there and these underwater plumes are varying in size and shape. This stuff is obviously moving around out there,” Louie Miller, state director of the Mississippi Sierra Club, said to the Press-Register.

"William Walker, executive director of the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources responded, “Quit talking about it without any evidence what you are saying is true.” [...] “I have no confidence in Bill Walker whatsoever. He might as well be working for BP. He is not protecting the resources of Mississippi… By doing all this, they have put us in a situation where the claims are going to be very limited and more easily contested by BP.”"

TruthOut: Uncovering the Lies That Are Sinking the Oil
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Times-Picayune: Oil spill plugged, but more oiled birds than ever are being found

"Before BP plugged the well with a temporary cap on July 15, an average of 37 oiled birds were being collected dead or alive each day. Since then, the figure has nearly doubled to 71 per day, according to a Times-Picayune review of daily wildlife rescue reports.

"The figures for sea turtles have climbed even higher, with more oiled turtles recovered in the past 10 days than during the spill's first three months."

CNN: In the Gulf, scientific questions still lurk beneath the surface

"When Ed Overton looks at the remains of what's happened to the Gulf of Mexico over the past few months, he sees a stale, unsolved crime scene.

""We can see the beaches; we can see the dead animals; we can get a count on turtles and whales and all this stuff -- and all of that is eye-level observation," said Overton, a professor emeritus at Louisiana State University and a veteran of oil-spill science. "What we don't know is what damage is done ... to little creatures down below the surface -- or just at the surface -- that we never see."

"If the larvae of a vulnerable fish species like the bluefin tuna are completely wiped it, it may not matter that many of the adults appear to have survived."

Huffington Post: Scientists Find Evidence That Oil And Dispersant Mix Is Making Its Way Into The Foodchain

"We're looking at long-term ecological effects of having this oil in contact with marine organisms."

"Dispersant doesn't make the oil go away, it just puts it from one part of the ecosystem into another. The decision was to keep as much of the oil subsurface as possible. As a result, the immediate impact on coastal wildlife was mitigated. But the effects on ocean life are less clear -- in part because there's less known about ocean ecosystems than coastal ones."

Tampa Tribune: Beach beauty is skin-deep

"University of South Florida professor estimates cleanup work along Panhandle beaches and elsewhere across the Gulf Coast has removed only about 25 percent of the oil that has stained the shorelines."

Florida Panhandle officials notice "what looks like a congealed glob of Vaseline that is hovering just offshore".

Veterans Today: Disappearing Oil and Gulf Seafood: Passing the Sniff Test

HuffPost: Oilgate! BP and All the President's Men (Except One) Seek to Contain Truth of Leak in the Gulf

BK Kim, Newsvine: Why is BP's Macondo blowout so disastrous & Beyond Patch-up.
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Deepwater Horizon Response:26 July Press Briefing
According to Incident Commander Admiral Thad Allen, "we're going to have tar balls and other kind of impacts are going to go on for a long, long time."

Picayune:Tuesday's list of oiled locations in Louisiana

Example details: St. Bernard Parish fighting tar balls, patch of oil near Chandeleur Islands
"Oil skimmers have been dispatched to fight a large band of tar balls discovered near Comfort Island in St. Bernard Parish, St. Bernard Parish government said today. The patch of tar balls, three to four miles long and about three miles wide, was detected today." "A flyover conducted today also discovered a 10-mile long, quarter-mile wide streamer of emulsified oil about three miles off the northern tip of the Chandeleur Islands" "Also today, the Louisiana National Guard collected 28 bags, about 700 pounds, of oily debris on the recently-constructed berm at the Chandeleur Island chain".

Not all officially reported? CNN short video via YouTube:St. Bernard Parish President Taffaro says new oil coming in to Parish marshes every day

Picayune: BP working to increase its ability to contain oil even as plans for 'static kill' move forward

Meanwhile:

WWL: Tug vessel hits abandoned gas well in Barataria Waterway
"A mix of natural gas, contaminated water and light crude oil is spewing 100 feet in the air."

Examiner:BP says top kill mud was toxic: Tony Hayward testimony may now be perjury

Summary of story thus far on Alabama Live: Oil spill Day 100: The Gulf disaster, day by day

Perspective from Roger Ebert: BP's tree fell on my lawn

VI Day + 4

May. 1st, 2007 08:41 am
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Happy 4th Anniversary of Victory In Iraq.
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Gore Vidal, in his article in The Independant (mirror of full article for free) pointed out one of those curious rare moments of ironic truth in administration statements.

On his Katrina anniversery visit to NOLA, Bush said: "A year ago I made a pledge that we will learn the lessons of Katrina and that we will do what it takes to help you recover. I've come back to New Orleans to tell you the words that I spoke on Jackson Square are just as true today as they were then."

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