Horse dies, France faces reality of toxic beaches
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- JanforGore
- added this
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090828/ap_on_re_eu/eu_france_toxic_beaches
France – It should have been a perfect day for Vincent Petit, finishing up an afternoon gallop on a wide expanse of beach along a pastel-colored bay. Instead, he and his mount were sucked into a hole of noxious black sludge.The horse died within seconds, the rider lost consciousness and a dirty secret on the Brittany coast reverberated across France — decaying green algae was fouling some of its best beaches.
A report ordered by the government after the accident found concentrations of hydrogen sulfide gas emitted by the rotting algae were as high as 1,000 parts per million on the beach where the horse died — an amount that "can be fatal in several minutes."
There had been signs of a crisis for years in this idyllic corner of Brittany. But scaring away tourists was in no one's interest, including the farming industry — the region's economic backbone — whose nitrate-packed fertilizers power algae blooms.
So, while tongues wagged, folks whispered and acrimony grew, an official hush prevailed. It took the death of the horse to bring the problem into the open.
Decaying ulva algae threatens other beaches around France and the world, from the United States to China, experts say. Last year, the Chinese government brought in the army to remove the slimy growths so the Olympic sailing competition could be held.
In Brittany's Cote d'Armor region, conditions are perfect for its spread — sunlight, shallow waters and flat beaches. Chemical and natural fertilizers like pig excrement, loaded with nitrates and phosphorous, have saturated the land, spilling into rivers and the ocean, feeding the algae that then proliferate.
Harmless while in water, the algae form dangerous gases — notably hydrogen sulfide, with its characteristic rotten-egg smell — when they wash up on land and decay. A white crust forms and traps the gases, which are released when stepped on or otherwise disturbed. Over time, putrefied algae turns sand into a black silt muck, sometimes containing pockets of poison gas.
On July 28, Petit, a 28-year-old researcher in a state-run virology lab, had just finished riding his thoroughbred Sir Glitter, a retired racehorse, on the Saint-Michel-en-Greves beach, when the two were suddenly mired in muck as he led the horse on foot in search of a place to cross a stream running through the sand.
"The horse and I slid in," said Petit, who is also trained in veterinary studies. "A horse in that situation is in an enormous panic, but he didn't have time to struggle."
Petit said he watched horrified as his horse stopped breathing and died within about 30 seconds, then he himself passed out. Petit was pulled from the mire by a bulldozer shovel after a man who witnessed the accident gave the alert.
While locals are aware of the perils posed by the silt traps that lurk under the sand around streams that feed from the beach into the ocean, Petit did not sense the danger until the ground gave way and he and his horse were sucked into the noxious ooze up to the man's chest.
Police initially ruled the horse suffocated, but an autopsy showed the animal died of an acute pulmonary edema with symptoms "compatible with gaseous intoxication in a brutal manner," Petit said, quoting the report, which he paid for.
There was no foreign matter in the horse's throat, lungs or stomach and no sign of a heart attack, he said.
There have been local efforts to clear the blight. Mayor Rene Ropartz said Saint-Michel-en-Greve, a village of 480 people, collected 10,000 tons of algae from the mile-long beach by the end of July; several years ago they cleaned up 21,000 tons.
"This bay is magnificent and, unfortunately, this tarnishes the image," said Ropartz, adding that the horse's death shows the role of the algae "is no longer in doubt" and spurred the government into action.
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- groups:
- News, Green, Current Tonight, Max and Jason: Still Up, 1 more
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- tags:
- Environment, Toxic, fertilizers, Algae Blooms
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JanforGore
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Thanks once again for contributing nothing of substance to the conversation.
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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GodsnLiberals
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I am going to organize a concert..write a book and direct a movie to raise awareness about poisonous beaches !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I want to be as rich as bono, micheal moore and al gore..
- 5 months ago
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GodsnLiberals
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JanforGore
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I am hoping better than it is now. I'm wondering how it will be for my own son and his children. I find myself asking this question more and more: how can we know what we are doing and still continue to do it?
- 5 months ago
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JanforGore
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SeaJade
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JanforGore:
Re: how can we know what we are doing and still continue to do it? food for thought and possibilities: Mass hypnotism via mainstream media is one way humans, collectively, are not in their right minds and keep on consuming... Inadequate nutrition is another element that dulls people's minds and thought processes... then there is greed and that tiny emotion that appears in humans called "not feeling good enough" (that might come under mainstream media hypnotism) so they think supporting products and lifestyles, becoming good consumers, will balance that feeling out...
- 5 months ago
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SeaJade
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csmonut
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It is amazing that humans have poisoned so much in so little time.
Wonder what life will be like in a couple hundred years? - 5 months ago
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csmonut
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SeaJade
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csmonut:
I doubt there would be life in a couple of hundred years with the things the way they are now csmonut, but "Soylent Green" gives a good indicator of what life might be in a relatively few short years...
(and i know, Monsanto Gr.....uh, sorry, Soylent Green and They Live are a couple of my favorite movies which often come in handy to try and understand what is going on around us and the why's of it all - like life imitates art or is it the other way around kind of thing...)
- 5 months ago
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SeaJade
