This just in from Mobile Alabama:
http://blog.al.com/live/2010/05/gulf_of_mexico_has_plenty_of_f.html
Gulf of Mexico has plenty of familiarity with oil spills
By Press-Register staff
May 04, 2010, 4:33PM
Oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico has led to a number of disasters and near disasters over the past 31 years. In some cases, authorities were unable to stamp out fires or stop spills for months; in others, quick action and good luck prevented disasters from becoming worse than they could have been.
View full size(Courtesy NOAA)Stopping the oil from the IXTOC explosion took over nine months.IXTOC (1979)
The IXTOC I was an exploratory well that blew up in the Bay of Campeche on June 3, 1979, after oil and gas feeding from the well ignited. At its height the well may have pumped upwards of 30,000 barrels of oil (1.26 million gallons) into the Gulf a day; currents eventually brought the oil to the Texas shore that August. Engineers were finally able to cap the well on March 23, 1980. The spill is the second-largest in history, behind the deliberate oil spills created at the end of the 1991 Gulf War. Total cleanup costs are estimated at $498 million (about $1.4 billion in 2010 dollars).View full size(Courtesy NOAA)The Burmah Agate caught fire after a collision on November 1, 1979, killing 31 sailors.
Burmah Agate (1979)
As the Texas coastline struggled against the fallout from the IXTOC, a new disaster compounded the woes. The Burmah Agate collided with a freighter near Galveston, Texas on November 1, 1979, causing the ship to explode and killing 31 crew members. The ship spilled 2.6 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico and burned for over two months. View full size(Courtesy NOAA)The Megaborg caught fire while fueling a number of smaller ships.
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aaaak
Please read the whole article…I had to stop before I suffocated..
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