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Texas Tar Balls Prompt Soil, Water Sampling

JUAN A. LOZANO   07/ 7/10 10:14 PM ET   AP

Texas Tar Balls

GALVESTON, Texas — Texas officials on Wednesday continued collecting soil and water samples along the state's coastline, part of their response plan after this week's confirmation that crude from the Gulf oil spill has made its way onto the state's shores.

Biologists with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department are collecting the samples to give them a data baseline they will use to assess the spill's effect on Texas if more tar balls and oil are found.

The sample collection began Monday after officials announced that test results confirmed tar balls found over the weekend along the Texas Gulf Coast were from the BP oil spill, said Winston Denton, a biologist with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

On Wednesday, Denton and other biologists wearing waders and rubber gloves gathered samples of dirt, water and various invertebrate animals such as mollusks at two Galveston beaches. The samples, placed in brown jars and plastic bags, will be sent to private labs for testing.

The data obtained will be used to develop plans "to minimize the impact on wildlife" should more oil hit the Texas shoreline, Denton said.

Samples are being collected over the next two weeks from Port Arthur near the Louisiana border to Port Isabel in south Texas, said Mike Cox, a spokesman for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

Texas officials continue waiting for test results of samples from five ships that hauled waste from the oil spill to the Galveston area. The results could determine whether the ships are the sources of the tar balls found in Galveston and the Bolivar Peninsula or if they came naturally on currents.

Officials have said the consistency and light weathering of the tar balls seems to indicate the oil might have hitched a ride on a ship that worked in the spill.

U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Richard Brahm said an additional 3.5 gallons of tar balls had been found on Galveston and Bolivar since late Tuesday. They were being tested to determine their origin.

Galveston Mayor Joe Jaworski on Wednesday continued promoting the message that despite the discovery of tar balls "all 32 miles of Galveston's beaches are clean, safe, open and awaiting summer tourists." Tourism is one of the major sources of revenue for Galveston's economy.

BP spokesman Daren Beaudo said the British oil company is reviewing a request from Texas to provide $25 million to pay for the cleanup efforts.

"Ultimately we are responsible for the clean up and we will take care of any materials that will happen to impact Texas," he said.

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GALVESTON, Texas — Texas officials on Wednesday continued collecting soil and water samples along the state's coastline, part of their response plan after this week's confirmation that crude fro...
GALVESTON, Texas — Texas officials on Wednesday continued collecting soil and water samples along the state's coastline, part of their response plan after this week's confirmation that crude fro...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rollingrock
03:22 AM on 07/10/2010
Texas loves oil! They are the biggest baddest oilyest state!
I hope they swim in it and choke on it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
05:48 PM on 07/08/2010
Kevin Costner's oil skimmer to work in fouled Gulf

Source: Associated Press

PORT FOURCHON, La. — Kevin Costner's company has sent an oil-skimming vessel to help clean some of the crude that has fouled the Gulf of Mexico.

The actor told workers and visitors Thursday who had come to see the latest in the fight against the oil spill that "the machine I once dreamed of is here to help you."

The Ella G, now one of the Vessels of Opportunity, was retrofitted to receive oil and water from the skimmer, separate the oil and place it in storage tanks, and return the cleaned water to the Gulf. It had once been an offshore supply barge.

The system was built in 10 days, and BP chief operating officer Doug Suttles says the system offers many advantages. He says it can remove more oil, stay at sea indefinitely, and skim in seas up to 10 feet. Most skimmers can't work in seas higher than 4 feet.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jsBA97BcyWFKvO0q4-h5pG2arFdgD9GR43JO0
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
12:16 PM on 07/08/2010
OT:
La Nina developing, could mean more hurricanes
Source: Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The climate phenomenon known as La Nina appears to be developing, threatening more bad news in the efforts to clean up the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

When a La Nina occurs there tend to be more hurricanes than normal in the Atlantic and Caribbean regions, which include the Gulf of Mexico.

The federal Climate Prediction Center said Thursday that La Nina conditions are likely to develop in July and August.

La Nina is marked by an unusual cooling of the sea surface in the tropical Pacific Ocean. Water temperatures in that area can affect air pressure and winds, resulting in changes in the weather in many parts of the world.

In a La Nina, wind shear is increased over the Pacific and reduced over the Atlantic. Wind shear is the difference in strength of winds at low levels compared to higher level winds.

A strong wind shear reduces hurricanes by breaking up their ability to rise into the air, while less shear means they can climb and strengthen.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_SCI_LA_NINA?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2010-07-08-11-58-51
10:44 AM on 07/08/2010
Better collect those samples before BP security officals find out about it.

You might go to jail.
08:57 AM on 07/08/2010
Once it reached texass now we do the sampling, oh I see.
12:36 AM on 07/08/2010
BP--Bullshit Personified