Monday, April 18, 2011

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Cheap RS Gold Making Guide Researchers judge the health of the Gulf of Mexico as almost to normal at one year from the BP oil spill, but the obvious errors, which limit their capacity for natural recovery, optimism in Associated Press poll shows researchers.

More than three dozen scientists from class in the Persian Gulf a big picture of health, an average of 68 uses a 1-to-100 scale. What is significant is that only a few points under 71 gave the same researchers last summer, when asked what can harm the ecosystem before the spill. And it is an improvement of 65 in October.

Meanwhile, scientists are worried. Cited a significant decline in key health indicators, such as marine dolphins, and oysters. In interviews, dozens of experts in the Gulf, said his concerns, pointing to the mysterious deaths of hundreds of young dolphins and turtles, crabs and strangely colored patches of dead on the ocean floor.

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Editor's Note - It will take time to see the full effect of oil pollution in the Gulf of Mexico. Now the scientific degree of the ecological health of the Gulf in a survey by the Associated Press a year after April 20, 2010, the BP oil spill. Third in an occasional series.

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The survey results mirror impressions Jane Lubchenco, the head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, has given the health of the Gulf, in an interview with The Associated Press on Thursday.

The Gulf is "much better than man but the jury is concerned about what the outcome Celebrate Halloween with Cheap RS Gold will be," she said. "It is too early to conclude that things are going well ... There are surprises on the way to -. We find dead baby dolphin"

Just as it was before the accident on April 20 when the oil rig Deepwater Horizon has exploded, possibly spewing 172 million gallons of oil, the Gulf continues to be a place of contradictions: The surface looks as if nothing happened, while potentially important problems hidden deep beneath the surface of difficult access in bogs and in the slow movement of the food chain. Some may not even be known for years.

"When one considers the entire Gulf of Mexico, I think the natural restoration of the bay is almost back to where it was before the spill," says Wes tunnel at Texas A & M University who wrote a scientific advisory federal arbitrator's award money for residents and businesses because of oil pollution. Tunnel qualities are typical. He says the overall health of the Gulf before the spill was 70, he gives a 69 today.

If this range before the spill is not impressive, as the Gulf has been the victim of an oil drilling environment and natural seeps, overfishing, hurricanes and massive oxygen-free dead zone caused by the absorption of 40 percent of U.S. farm and urban runoff from the Mississippi River.

Today, a dozen scientists give the bay a good level as before the flight. One of these is the Louisiana State University professor Ed Overton, a veteran of oil spills. He described a recent trip to Gulf Shores, Ala.: "I walked a half mile along the beach and there was tar in view was beautiful as I've ever seen.".

The study of certain types, such as snapper and king mackerel, even though the average out-degree higher than before the fall, mainly because of the prohibition of fishing for partial months, has helped the population to flourish.

Although it looks good, the average scores for the sinking ocean floor 68 before launching a failing grade of 57 today. The dolphins appeared to be fine, but more than canned food through normal channels - about 300 since the spill - the level dropped to 66 compared with a pre-release 75. Oysters, always under siege, fell 10 points, crabs fell 6 points. And the global food chain has fallen from 70 to 64 before today's launch. Buy Cartier Jewelry

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