Ithaca 37
New member
".........More than a billion pounds of seafood are caught here each year, for instance, but fisheries are evaporating as erosion destroys the balance of saltwater and freshwater. In many places, the state's natural protection from storms has also vanished.
Scientists who are studying the problem — some affiliated with the state, others with local universities and industries — point to a host of potential causes. For decades, the state allowed ranchers, industries and others to dig navigation canals through marshy areas, only to realize in recent years that lasting damage had been done. Global warming (news - web sites), most scientists agree, is causing sea levels to rise, which also has contributed to the problem.
Much of the damage, however, can be tied directly to the energy industry. Scores of canals have been dug to make room for pipelines. Others, some of them 100 feet wide, were built to accommodate barges needed to steer drilling platforms into open water.
Because of the loss of marshes, numerous pipelines that were once protected by silt and vegetation — and were not built for open-water conditions — are now exposed, resting like spaghetti on the seabed in shallow water.............."
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...3/ts_latimes/moneyspiedoffavanishingcoastline
Scientists who are studying the problem — some affiliated with the state, others with local universities and industries — point to a host of potential causes. For decades, the state allowed ranchers, industries and others to dig navigation canals through marshy areas, only to realize in recent years that lasting damage had been done. Global warming (news - web sites), most scientists agree, is causing sea levels to rise, which also has contributed to the problem.
Much of the damage, however, can be tied directly to the energy industry. Scores of canals have been dug to make room for pipelines. Others, some of them 100 feet wide, were built to accommodate barges needed to steer drilling platforms into open water.
Because of the loss of marshes, numerous pipelines that were once protected by silt and vegetation — and were not built for open-water conditions — are now exposed, resting like spaghetti on the seabed in shallow water.............."
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...3/ts_latimes/moneyspiedoffavanishingcoastline