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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Décembre 11, 2024, 02:31:16 pm
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A wellhead cap at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico is slowly pinching off a geyser of oil spewing from the earth, but there s no containing much of the crude that s already escaped, a reality becoming increasingly evident on the region s beaches.According to BP officials, the containment device is trapping and bringing to the surface possibly half of the leaking oil, report stanley kubek (https://www.stanley-cup.pl) s CBS News correspondent Mark Strassman. But the battle to contain the oil is likely to stretch into the fall, the government s point man on the spill warned. The cap will trap only so much of the oil, and relief wells being drilled won t be completed until August. Meanwhile, oil will continue to shoot out.To Kelcey Forrestier, a 23-year-old biology graduate visiting Okaloosa Island, Florida, it was already clear Sunday t stanley cup (https://www.stanley-tumbler.us) hat the spill and its damage will last long into the future. Oil just doesn t go away. Oil doesn t disappear, said Forrestier, of New Orleans. It has to go somewhere and it s going to come to the Gulf beaches. Special Section: Disaster in the GulfLifeguards found a very minor set of fingernail-size tar balls over the weekend on the western edge of the island about 35 miles east of Pensacola, marking the easternmost point oil has been discovered ashore.The spill s harmful environmental effects also appear to have spr stanley cups (https://www.stanleycup.lt) ead to Texas, with the government saying Sunday that dead, oiled birds were reported for the first time in that state. A wildlife report issued Sunday by the governme Gffc Cover Your Android s Lockscreen in Just the Apps You Really Need
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