Painting The Bay Red ... And Green
Research Funded By Tecolote Sewage Spill Fine
POSTED: 1:04 pm PST November 13,
2002
UPDATED: 1:31 pm PST November 13,
2002
SAN DIEGO -- Mission Bay was a little more colorful Wednesday, as scientists used brightly hued dye to get an idea of how pollution is spread through the water body.
The city of San Diego is overseeing the study done by a Scripps Institution of Oceanography team.The aim of the study is to help understand where pollution in a given part of Mission Bay might have originated.
"This project will add much value to the ongoing monitoring of bacteria levels in Mission Bay," said John Largier of Scripps, who is the principal investigator.Researchers in boats are this week leaving trails of the nontoxic bright red or green dye in the water, and then will track the shape and movement of dye patches and the concentration in the water."We can measure the flow and dilution -- not just look at the interesting patterns and see how visible it is," Largier said. "That's really where the science is."The dye releases will be done through Christmas Eve.The study is funded by a state fine the city had to pay because of a large sewage spill in 2001.
| Video |
Previous Stories:
- October 10, 2001: Sewage Fine Money To Return To City
- June 13, 2001: City Fined Millions For Tecolote Sewage Spill
- March 28, 2001: Council Members Demand Tecolote Spill Accountability
- March 27, 2001: Councilman Raises Stink Over Tecolote Spill
- March 23, 2001: Tecolote Sewage Spill Prompts Change
- March 1, 2001: Sewage Spill Shuts Down Mission Bay
Copyright 2007 by 10News.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.









