http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/science/12/22/alaska.valdez.reut/index.htmlA study published in the journal Science has found the devastating effects on Alaska’s waters and beaches from 1989’s Exxon Valdez oil spill lasted far longer and are far worse than first suspected.
When the Valdez supertanker slammed into a reef and started pouring 11 million gallons of crude oil into Alaska’s Prince William Sound, scientists knew thousands of birds and sea mammals would die quickly. But they predicted the environment would recover as soon as the oil weathered and dissipated.
Instead, sea life suffered for years, because even tiny patches of remnant oil lowered sur-vival, slowed reproduction and stunted growth. Lingering oil has created cascading problems for fish, birds and marine mammals, according to the new study, published
.
"Everything wasn’t all right in July 1989, and it wasn’t all right for a number of organisms years after that," Charles Peterson, a University of North Carolina professor and the report’s principal investigator, told Reuters.