Underwater oil plumes could create new ‘dead zone’ in Gulf
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 NEW ORLEANS — Giant plumes of oil floating deep in the Gulf of Mexico could create a new “dead zone” of oxygen-depleted waters unfit for marine life and wreak environmental damage that will take generations to overcome, scientists warned Monday. “Normally, in a  shallow spill, everything pretty much shoots up to the surface and the  impacts are primarily to surface organisms like turtles, dolphins, and  birds,” said Paul Montagna, a marine ecologist at the Harte Research  Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies. But the oil  which has been gushing out of the wreckage of the BP-leased Deepwater  Horizon since April 22 is traveling up through chilly, dark waters 5,000  feet below the surface. “Under this really cold,  high pressure environment the oil is getting dispersed through the water  column,” Montagna said in a telephone interview. “What  that means is that basically life in the entire water column is now  being exposed.”....MORE Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100519com5.html | 
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