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La marea negra llega a las costas de EE.UU.

La marea negra llega a las costas de EE.UU.

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  • Employees of D&C Seafood unload what they expect to be the last of the shrimp catch at their facilities in Venice

    Uno de los últimos camarones recogidos antes de que llegue el vertido a Venecia

    Employees of D&C Seafood unload what they expect to be the last of the shrimp catch at their facilities in Venice, Louisiana, May 1, 2010. The U.S. government pressured energy giant BP to avert an environmental disaster as a huge, unchecked oil spill reached coastal Louisiana, imperilling fish and shrimp breeding grounds and vulnerable wetlands teeming with wildlife. The shrimp fleet is in port waiting to see if they allowed to return to shrimping following the Deepwater Horizon oil platform disaster. REUTERS/Tim Aubry/Greenpeace/Handout (UNITED STATES - Tags: ENVIRONMENT ENERGY DISASTER) NO SALES. NO ARCHIVES. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS
  • Oil booms are seen washed ashore on the coast of South Pass, south of Venice, Louisiana

    El vertido se lava en la costa de South Pass, al sur de Venecia, Lousiana

    Oil booms are seen washed ashore on the coast of South Pass, south of Venice, Louisiana, where oil leaking from the Deepwater Horizon wellhead continues to spread in the Gulf of Mexico, May 1, 2010. Weather forecast said deteriorating weather and rough seas would hamper cleanup crews this weekend as they tried to lay more of the floating booms. Boats set out from Venice on Saturday to lay fresh lines of the orange boom. REUTERS/Carlos Barria (UNITED STATES - Tags: DISASTER ENERGY ENVIRONMENT)
  • VERTIDO DE PETRÓLEO EN EL GOLFO DE MÉXICO

    Vertido en una playa de St. Louis

    AMH01 BAY SAINT LOUIS (EEUU) 02/05/2010.- Asher Watts observa la marea en una playa de bay St. Louis, Misisipi (EEUU), hoy, 2 de mayo de 2010. Un pozo marino de la compañía British Petroleum explotó el pasado día 20 de abril en el Golfo de México, y ahora vierte cada día, según las estimaciones oficiales y de la propia BP, alrededor de 800.000 litros de petróleo al mar. EFE/Ann Heisenfelt

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