In Photos: Haunting images of the gulf oil disaster

An oil-soaked bird struggles against the side of an Iron Horse supply vessel at the site of the oil spill off Louisiana on May 9. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
In Photos: Haunting images of the gulf oil disaster
It’s been more than a month since an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig killed 11 people and blew out an undersea well that continues to gush oil into the Gulf of Mexico. In the following weeks, there have been attempts to contain and control the scope of the environmental damage.
But so far none have been successful. Over
the weekend, Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal announced he intended to proceed with plans to
construct sand booms to protect his state's shoreline — without waiting for federal
approval. Meanwhile, engineers for BP are working
feverishly to prepare for their "top kill" maneuver, hoping
an injection of heavy mud will stop the leak.
Dead sharks and dolphins
are washing ashore. Crabs, turtles and birds are being found soaked in
oil as the slick sloshes into Louisiana’s wetlands. South of New Orleans, chocolate-like globs
of oil have shut down the public beach.
Coast Guard officials
say the spill’s impact now stretches 150 miles.
Some scientists fear the spreading plumes
will catch the ocean current to the Florida Keys and up to the eastern
seaboard.
Photographers' images, some of them chillingly beautiful, can only begin to hint at the enormity of the disaster.

Shrimp boats equipped with booms collect
oil in Chandeleur Sound, La., on May 5. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Oil moves past an oil rig, top right, in Chandeleur Sound on
May 5. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

A Portuguese man-of-war is seen from under the oily water in Chandeleur Sound on May 6. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

A dead jellyfish floats amid oil May 6 in the Gulf of Mexico,
southwest of the Southwest Pass of the Mississippi River on the coast of
Louisiana. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

A Coast Guard plane flies over the Development Driller III
oil drilling platform, which was drilling a relief well May 12 at the
site of the Deepwater
Horizon oil spill. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Risers, the outer casings of oil
drill pipes, are seen on the deck of the service vessel Joe Griffin as
it prepares to head to Port
Fourchon, La., on May 11. (Pool Photo/Gerald Herbert)

An aerial view of the northern Chandeleur barrier islands,
20 miles from the main Louisiana coastline, shows sheens of oil reaching
land May 6. (AP Photo/David Quinn)

A pod of bottlenose dolphins swims in the oily water of
Chandeleur Sound on May 6. Five days later, six dead dolphins were
found along the Gulf
Coast. Officials were investigating oil's role in the deaths. (AP
Photo/Alex Brandon)

An oil-stained cattle egret is seen on the deck of the Joe
Griffin supply vessel May 9. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Oil swirls in the Gulf of Mexico currents May 6. (AP
Photo/Dave Martin)

Contractors unload oil booms to protect marshlands May 13 in
Hopedale, La. (John Moore/Getty Images)

Pelicans fly past a nest of eggs
apparently stained with oil on a Louisiana island May 22. The
island is home to hundreds of brown pelican nests as well as terns, gulls
and roseated spoonbills. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

A glob of oil thought to be from
the massive oil spill
in the Gulf of Mexico
sits on a reed on a beach in Southwest Pass, La., on May 15.
(Reuters/Lee Celano)

A Greenpeace
worker collects samples of oil May 19 that washed up along the mouth of
the Mississippi River
near Venice, La. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

An oil-covered dragonfly, stuck to
marsh grass, tries to clean itself May 18 in Garden Island Bay near Venice. (AP
Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Birds fly over oil on the water April 29 near Breton Sound
Island, on the southernmost tip of the Chandeleur Islands. (Reuters/Sean
Gardner/Greenpeace/Handout)
Other oil spill headlines in Yahoo! News:
• MORE PHOTOS: See hundreds more
images from the oil spill
• How to help the wildlife
(Network for Good)
• Cleaning oil-soaked wetlands
may be impossible
Article: HERE



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