Sunday, 21 January 2018

A small gem

... that has nothing to do with anything.


The township is called Golf and Google Maps chooses to place this placename on top of the golf course and to me this is the most beautiful thing in the world.
And can we just not just now get into the details of the impact Golf courses have on the environment?  Sure in our wet-ish northern Illinois climate it's ok (well not not really because they still use chemicals to keep that grass pretty), but when they put golf courses in the desert?  Who does that?  Do they forget how much water it takes to get grass to grow?  Wrapping my tiny brain around that is just... I have difficulty is all.
Sorry I've been away.  Since I last worked on this blog I've moved countries, back to Illinois, and am doing that thing where a business takes all my time and energy in exchange for me being able to pay my bills.  Pretty sweet, right?  I'm trying to get back on the ball, but I'm exhausted.
Thanks anyway.

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Love Canal does not have Great Chemistry

First, I'd like to apologise for this inaugural post being late.  I have reasons, but they are unimportant in the grand scale of things, and I'd like to start this blog off with a bang.

The bang of "pop rocks", anyway.

The story of Love Canal is one of industrialism, poor recordkeeping, and how concerned moms can change everything.

Love Canal sprang from some not-so-humble ambitions.  In the 1890s, businessman William Love foresaw great economic growth in the Niagara Falls, NY area, and he decided it would be a fantastic idea to dig a canal all the way from Lake Ontario to the Niagara River.  He could build hydroelectric power stations on it to keep what he was absolutely certain, as many were at the time, was set to be a growing, bustling town running.

Love's ambitions were well intended, but recession struck, and he had to abandon his canal-digging venture by 1910.  One bit to the south had been dug out already, but was left to fill with rainwater.  For decades it was used as a swimming hole in the summer and an ice skating pond in the winter.  There are conflicting reports about exactly when the property was turned over to Hooker Chemical Company to be used as a dumping ground for waste.  It is said that the U.S. Army also dumped waste from chemical weapon experiments in the canal as well. 
Eventually the barrels of waste were covered up with dirt and landfill, and the site forgotten about.  People may have not known how hazardous those chemicals were.  In 1953, the land was sold to the Board of Education for $1, and a school, park, and housing development were built on top of or nearby the canal.   The deed for the land did include a warning about what lay beneath the surface in this area, but studies of the effects of the type of chemicals Hooker had disposed there were relatively new, and this was cheap land for the city at a time when cheap land was much needed.  And for years after the neighbourhood was built up, things were fine. 
The 1970s ushered in a new era of change though, both for the country as a whole and for Love Canal as a place.  Heavy rainfalls dislodged many of the barrels of chemicals buried underground in the area, and the barrels, ageing and corroding like one would expect them to with time, leached chemicals into the ground, into the sewers, and even into the air via chemical vapors.  Although the chiemical company had put a copper barrier n place before burying the site and selling it off, that was broken while the school and surrounding homes were built. 
Area residents were complaining of strange odors in their basements after heavy rains.  Children were returning home after playing outside with chemical burns on their hands and faces.  Those "pop rocks" I mentioned at the beginning of this post?  Those were rocks of phosphorous that had made it to the surface, that exploded when thrown at the ground, that children would play with.  Children were being born with severe birth defects, and expectant mothers in the area were miscarrying at a rate far more than experienced by the general population.  The local government did very little to help area residents.

TO BE CONTINUED

Author's note: Maybe actually publishing this would help.

SOME OTHER FANTASTIC LINKS:
http://www.toxipedia.org/display/toxipedia/Love+Canal+Disaster
http://www2.epa.gov/aboutepa/love-canal-tragedy
http://www.bu.edu/lovecanal/canal/
http://www.onlineethics.org/cms/9721.aspx



Saturday, 12 July 2014

About this blog

What is this anyway?-
 A blog chronicling environmental disaster sites, basically.  And a fun little side project for me.  I plan to provide supplemental information in the form of links for y'all to visit as well. 

 Why this?-
 This blog is inspired by sprol.com, a website which apparently no longer exists. 
The premise of sprol.com was google sightseeing, at the time many posts were created, google maps' satellite imaging was a new technology.  But it was different google sightseeing than many other websites provided.  Instead of focusing on fun tourist destinations, it was our "ticket to the worst places on Earth." 
Since it's gone, I just want to put something in this place.  Surely there must be an interest for this sort of thing.

When to post?-
Weekly, hopefully.   How does Thursday sound?

Who are you?-
Just a simple guy.  Geographer turned business student.  Hoping to start work soon.