Still Life in OilFort Jackson, Louisiana (USA). June 20, 2010. Volunteers of the Tri-State Bird Rescue and Research and the International Bird Rescue Research Center run the facility in Fort Jackson, Louisiana , where they clean birds covered in oil from the Deepwater Horizon wellhead. The BP leased oil platform that exploded on April 20 and sank after burning. Photo by © Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace.
Click on the pictures for the larger view.
The picture above and the pictures below are from the The Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2011 exhibit at the Natural History Museum in London.
After months of anticipation, the winners of Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2011 have been announced and the exhibition is now open at the Natural History Museum.The photos of all of the winners are outstanding. Browse the gallery at the link above. Any of you who are in or near London while the exhibit is on display through March 11, 2012, would do well to pay a visit. Book your tickets online.
The exhibition will tour nationally and internationally after its launch in London.PLEASE DO NOT COPY THE IMAGES TO ANY OTHER FORUM WITHOUT EXPLICIT PERMISSION FROM THE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM IN LONDON.
Since I live in south Louisiana, about 40 miles away from the Gulf of Mexico as the crow flies, my particular interest was in the photos by Daniel Beltra, who is from Spain, of the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig on April 20, 2010, and the aftermath. The photos are stunning, some of them quite beautiful, but they tell the story of a tragedy in which 11 men were killed, others injured, and a great deal of death and destruction dealt to the wildlife and plant life that inhabit the Gulf and coastal areas. The picture of the oiled pelicans is heart-breaking.
The photos are copyrighted by the photographer and are used here with permission. The pictures and captions, which are arranged by date starting with the earliest, with the exception of the photo at the head of the post, speak for themselves.
Louisiana (USA). May 6th, 2010. Aerial view of the oil leaked from the Deepwater Horizon wellhead, the BP leased oil platform exploded April 20 and sank after burning. Leaking an estimate of more than 200,000 gallons of crude oil per day from the broken pipeline to the sea. Eleven workers are missing, presumed dead. Photo by Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace
On April 20, 2010, Deepwater Horizon exploded, killing 11 crewmen and injuring 17. The platform sank 50 miles off shore, 1 mile deep, and weighed 58,000 tons. Oil from the wellhead rises up to the surface of the Gulf of Mexico near a different offshore platform, May 18, 2010. Photo © Daniel Beltra for Greenpeace
June 17, 2010. Louisiana (USA)Boats burning oil on the surface near BP's Deepwater Horizon spill source. ©Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace
June 17, 2010. Louisiana (USA)Oil covers the surface of the Gulf of Mexico on the vicinity of BP's Deepwater Horizon spill source. ©Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace
Louisiana (USA). June 24, 2010. Flight to the Deepwater Horizon site, the BP leased oil platform exploded on April 20 and sank after burning. In the picture, the wake of a vessel leaves a trail through the surface oil.Photo by © Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace.
Thanks to my friend Cathy for calling the photos of the winners to my attention.
Amazing that something so horrendously destructive could look so oddly beautiful. I exclude the picture of the pelicans from that though - it's such a well composed picture, with them all huddling together, but, as you say Mimi, heartbreaking.
ReplyDeleteCathy, it's hard to look at the pelicans, but that was the reality for those who survived to be taken to the rescue center.
ReplyDeleteI'm somewhat disappointed that this post, on which I spent a great deal of time, and which includes such stunning pictures, received so little attention.
ReplyDeleteYes, I'm disappointed by that too. The same thing happened with my links to the Wildlife Photographer of the Year on Facebook tho - they got pretty much no response. I find it extremely odd. They're all such fabulous photos. Also, Mimi, it's a very good post :( You've done the pictures proud.
ReplyDeleteWhere are you, you people out there!!! Come and read Mimi's post at once!!!
ReplyDeleteCathy, thanks. I don't understand at all. I may post a link on Facebook again, this time with a picture. I didn't know whether I should, but you used pictures, so I'll give it a try.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mimi.
ReplyDeleteWhat's your take on the situation now? As you know my home in Texas is about 20 miles from the Gulf. Of course, Texas didn't get hit the way the rest of you did. My pals who are fishermen and shrimpers are saying, "Oh, all's well... couldn't be better." But I haven't eaten from the Gulf since Deepwater.
Lindy, how to answer your question? The cocahoe minnows in the Gulf have experienced cellular changes that could bode ill for reproduction. Many fish feed on the minnows. Who knows what has happened to smaller organisms? I don't.
ReplyDeleteDead dolphins and even whales, especially premature fetuses of the two species, are washing up on the shore in larger numbers than usual. The immediate cause is bacteria, which, in the past, have not caused so many deaths. Have the bacteria mutated to a more lethal form, or are the two species more susceptible due to changes in their immune systems, and, if so, why? The studies are still underway.
The shrimpers here are having a difficult time with very poor catches of much smaller shrimp. I'm probably only skimming the surface of what's happening to the creatures in the Gulf. All is not well here.
Meanwhile BP seems to be doing okay.
ReplyDeleteWell, I love the Wildlife Photography competition, and I thought people would like to see the piccies. Apparently not :( I guess the protests at St Paul's is commanding a lot of attention at the moment? Still, that doesn't seem to quite explain it. Dunno, Mimi :(
7 billion in the world, 350 million Americans. There simply is no way to avoid using energy. The photos tell the tale, there are costs.
ReplyDeleteFWIW
jimB
Cathy, all of the winning pictures are excellent. I thought I'd have visits from the staff in the museum, but even that seems not to have happened, except for a very few visits the first day.
ReplyDeleteJim, you're right. There are too many of us.