Maison située sur une falaise surplombant Buffalo Bayou à Piney Point au Texas, conçue par l'architecte Jack Stehling en 1970, et rénovée sur une période de 2 ans par Robert Shane. Photo: 11100wickdale. - source MCM Daily.
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Maison située sur une falaise surplombant Buffalo Bayou à Piney Point au Texas, conçue par l'architecte Jack Stehling en 1970, et rénovée sur une période de 2 ans par Robert Shane. Photo: 11100wickdale. - source MCM Daily.
Yesterday I took a bunch of lighthouse books to the @littlefreelibrary at @pineypointlighthousemuseum. I hope people enjoy them!
Shot 📸 in Piney Point, Maryland (July 2014)
He called the millions of gallons of toxic wastewater that is about to spill into Tampa Bay (that is already leaking) "mixed saltwater"🙃
Excerpt from this story from EcoWatch:
Millions of gallons of water laced with fertilizer ingredients are being pumped into Florida's Tampa Bay from a leaking reservoir at an abandoned phosphate plant at Piney Point. As the water spreads into the bay, it carries phosphorus and nitrogen – nutrients that under the right conditions can fuel dangerous algae blooms that can suffocate sea grass beds and kill fish, dolphins and manatees.
It's the kind of risk no one wants to see, but officials believed the other options were worse.
About 300 homes sit downstream from the 480-million-gallon reservoir, which began leaking in late March 2021. State officials determined that pumping out the water was the only way to prevent the reservoir's walls from collapsing. They decided the safest location for all that water would be out through Port Manatee and into the bay.
Florida's coast is dotted with fragile marine sanctuaries and sea grass beds that help nurture the state's thriving marine and tourism economy. Those near Port Manatee now face a risk of algal blooms over the next few weeks. Once algae blooms get started, little can be done to clean them up.
The phosphate mining industry around Tampa is just one source of nutrients that can fuel dangerous algae blooms, which I study as a marine biologist. The sugarcane industry, cattle ranches, dairy farms and citrus groves all release nutrients that often flow into rivers and eventually into bays and the ocean. Sewage is another problem – Miami and Fort Lauderdale, for example, have old sewage treatment systems with frequent pipe breaks that leak sewage into canals and coastal waters.
All can fuel harmful algal blooms that harm marine life and people. Overall, blooms are getting worse locally and globally.
Shared to me on a discord server - copy and paste
@everyone please read this: if you live in florida, or know anyone if florida, in or near (within an hour or so's drive) of Piney Point, FL please put together a bug out plan. You are not safe where you are. A retaining pond at a phosphate plant is failing there and millions of gallons of highly radioactive waste water containing uranium and radium are about to spill out into the environment. This is a serious health and safety risk and anyone nearby needs to get away now. Please spread the word, contact any friends you know in the area, and feel free to steal this message to paste in your own servers (or other servers with the admin's permission)
Source 1: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/03/florida-emergency-piney-point-phosphate-plant-pond-leak-radioactive-flood-ron-desantis
Source 2: https://www.tampabay.com/news/environment/2021/04/02/plastic-liner-known-to-be-in-poor-shape-before-piney-point-leak-records-show/
Piney Point Lighthouse, Piney Point, Maryland, February 2022