L.A.'s coast was once a DDT dumping ground (2020)
latimes.comAnother unfortunate environmental disaster in the LA area is the Stringfellow Acid Pits, one of the first EPA superfund sites.
.....wait, we've known this for 20 years
It seems to take about 50 years of headlines (2 generations) for environmental concerns to get through to the public enough to make an impact. This is actually a really underappreciated thing. What's the next environmental catastrophe in 50 years? (optimistically assuming we somehow start acting on and survive the current global warming disaster that was discovered in 70sa/80s)
Wait till you read about carbon dioxide!
Is there a human-readable version of this page?
You could use your browser's Reader Mode. Firefox and Safari users already have it, and Chrome users can enable Reader Mode in chrome://flags (and then restart the browser for the new feature to be available)
I mean the US government itself was dumping mustard gas and other toxic chemicals into this area for decades.
Not sure the DDT ranks that high of concern.
>Not sure the DDT ranks that high of concern.
The studies linking aquatic harm are actually better than the studies linking terrestrial or avian harm. As it's poorly soluble in water it just sorta hangs around and kills fish. This was known all the way back in the 1940's https://spo.nmfs.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/legacy-pdfs/CI...
DDT has a long persistence in the environment, longer than mustard.
Sure but mustard kills you dead real quick. And is slowly leaking even decades later. It hasn’t gone away.
Agreed mustard is terrible. We should get that cleaned up immediately as well.
Weird that you think this is some sort of completion, weirder that you picked a side.
If your goal is just to cluck your tongue on the internet, then yeah, it's not a competition.
If you're looking to spend limited resources addressing it, spending it on the worse situation is just smart.