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  •  science >> Scienza >  >> Natura
    Come le acque al largo di Catalina sono diventate una discarica di DDT

    Credito:CC0 Dominio Pubblico

    Non lontano dall'isola di Santa Catalina, in un oceano condiviso da subacquei e pescatori, foreste di alghe e balene, David Valentine ha decodificato segnali insoliti sott'acqua che gli hanno dato i brividi.

    L'Università della California, Lo scienziato di Santa Barbara avrebbe dovuto studiare le infiltrazioni di metano quel giorno, ma con un robot degli abissi in prestito e qualche ora di anticipo, ora era l'occasione per confermare un abuso ambientale che altri in passato non potevano. Stava inseguendo un'intuizione, e abbastanza sicuro, le scansioni iniziali del sonar hanno restituito uno schema di punti che è apparso sulla mappa come una scia di briciole di pane.

    Il robot si è fatto strada 3, 000 piedi fino in fondo, luci brillanti e una macchina fotografica mentre sfiorava lentamente il fondo del mare. A questa profondità e oscurità, la topografia inesplorata sembrava inquietante come guidare attraverso un vasto deserto di notte.

    E fu allora che apparvero i barili.

    Barili pieni di sostanze chimiche tossiche vietate decenni fa.

    perdite.

    E disseminato sul fondo dell'oceano.

    "Santa merda. Questo è reale, " Valentino ha detto. "Questa roba è davvero laggiù.

    "È rimasto seduto qui per tutto questo tempo, proprio al largo della nostra riva."

    I racconti di questo segreto sepolto che gorgoglia sotto il mare hanno perseguitato Valentine per anni:un capitolo in gran parte sconosciuto nel più famigerato caso di distruzione ambientale al largo della costa di Los Angeles, uno che è durato decenni, costa decine di milioni di dollari, frustranti generazioni di scienziati. L'inquinamento dell'oceano era così avventato, alcuni dicevano, sembrava inimmaginabile.

    Fino a mezzo milione di questi barili potrebbe essere ancora sott'acqua in questo momento, secondo le interviste e una revisione dei documenti storici del Los Angeles Times, manifesti e ricerche non digitalizzate. Dal 1947 al 1982, il più grande produttore nazionale di DDT, un pesticida così potente da avvelenare uccelli e pesci, aveva sede a Los Angeles.

    Un'epica battaglia di Superfund in seguito ha rivelato lo smaltimento dei rifiuti tossici da parte dell'azienda attraverso i tubi di scarico che si riversavano nell'oceano, ma tutto il DDT che è stato lanciato in mare ha attirato relativamente poca attenzione.

    I registri di spedizione mostrano che ogni mese negli anni successivi alla seconda guerra mondiale, migliaia di barili di fango acido allacciati con questa sostanza chimica sintetica sono stati trasportati in un sito vicino a Catalina e scaricati nell'oceano profondo, così vasto che, secondo la saggezza popolare dell'epoca, diluirebbe anche i veleni più pericolosi.

    I regolatori hanno riferito negli anni '80 che gli uomini incaricati di sbarazzarsi dei rifiuti di DDT a volte prendevano scorciatoie e li scaricavano più vicino alla riva. E quando i barili erano troppo galleggianti per affondare da soli, un rapporto ha detto, gli equipaggi li hanno semplicemente perforati.

    L'oceano ha seppellito le prove per generazioni, ma la tecnologia moderna può portare gli scienziati a nuove profondità. Nel 2011 e 2013, Valentine e il suo team di ricerca sono stati in grado di identificare circa 60 barili e raccogliere alcuni campioni durante brevi incursioni al termine di altre missioni di ricerca.

    Un campione di sedimento ha mostrato concentrazioni di DDT 40 volte superiori alla più alta contaminazione registrata nel sito di Superfund, un'area designata a livello federale di rifiuti pericolosi che i funzionari avevano contenuto nelle acque meno profonde vicino a Palos Verdes.

    Il mondo di oggi lotta con le microplastiche, bisfenolo A (BPA), sostanze per- e polifluoroalchiliche (PFAS) e altre sostanze tossiche così innaturali che non sembrano mai scomparire. Ma il DDT, il composto quasi indistruttibile diclorodifeniltricloroetano, che prima ha sbalordito e sbalzato il pubblico nell'azione ambientale, persiste come un problema irrisolto e in gran parte dimenticato.

    I segni che avvertono di pesce contaminato fino ad oggi coprono ancora i moli locali. Studi recenti mostrano che il nostro sistema immunitario potrebbe essere compromesso. Una nuova generazione di donne, esposte al DDT dalle loro madri, che sono stati esposti dalle loro madri, alle prese con i rischi ancora misteriosi del cancro al seno.

    La contaminazione nei leoni marini e nei delfini continua a lasciare perplessi gli scienziati, e la quasi estinzione di falchi e aquile calve mostra come l'avvelenamento di un angolo del mondo possa propagarsi all'intero ecosistema.

    Decenni di burocrazia e questioni ambientali in competizione hanno distolto l'attenzione del pubblico. Valentine sperava che scavare prove fisiche dal fondo del mare avrebbe aiutato più persone a preoccuparsi, ma le chiamate e le e-mail a numerosi funzionari dopo la sua scoperta non sono andate da nessuna parte.

    Radunarsi per l'oceano profondo non è facile, Valentino ha riconosciuto, anche se contiamo sulla salute di queste acque molto più di quanto sappiamo:"Il fatto che ci potrebbero essere mezzo milione di barili laggiù... lo dobbiamo a noi stessi per capire cosa è successo, cosa c'è realmente laggiù e quanto si sta diffondendo".

    Una volta salutato come un importante risultato scientifico, Il DDT ha combattuto sia la malaria che il tifo durante la seconda guerra mondiale. Era così potente che una singola applicazione poteva proteggere un soldato per mesi. Il capo della medicina preventiva dell'esercito americano, Brigantino. Gen. James Simmons, notoriamente ha elogiato la sostanza chimica come "il più grande contributo della guerra alla futura salute del mondo".

    I produttori si sono affrettati a soddisfare la domanda del dopoguerra, tra cui Montrose Chemical Corp. della California, che ha aperto il suo stabilimento vicino a Torrance nel 1947. L'industria chimica è stata celebrata all'epoca per aver dato impulso alla nazione verso una maggiore prosperità e prevenuto i fallimenti dei raccolti in tutto il mondo. Gli Stati Uniti hanno utilizzato fino a 80 milioni di libbre di DDT in un anno.

    Ma c'erano due taglienti in questa spada. Un importante scienziato del Dipartimento dell'Agricoltura degli Stati Uniti aveva esortato i militari a non consentire l'uso commerciale degli insetticidi DDT senza ulteriori ricerche, preoccupati per "l'effetto che possono avere sui suoli e sull'intero equilibrio della natura".

    Anche il chimico svizzero Paul Hermann Muller, che ha vinto un premio Nobel nel 1948 per aver scoperto il DDT come pesticida, avvertì che lui stesso non aveva compreso appieno come la sostanza chimica interagisse con il mondo vivente. Decenni di scrupolosi studi attendono ancora i biologi, Egli ha detto.

    Rachel Carson, un biologo marino, ha ascoltato queste parole nel 1962 e ha acceso un movimento contro quello che lei chiamava "l'avvelenamento sconsiderato e irresponsabile del mondo che l'uomo condivide con tutte le altre creature".

    Il suo libro rivoluzionario "Silent Spring" ha evocato l'improvviso silenzio degli uccelli canori scomparsi nei cieli, avvertendo le persone ignare dei pericoli dell'esposizione a lungo termine, anche a piccole dosi, a una sostanza chimica che non potevano evitare fisicamente.

    Il DDT è così stabile che possono volerci generazioni per rompersi. In realtà non si dissolve in acqua ma si accumula facilmente nel grasso. Ad aggravare questi problemi c'è quella che oggi gli scienziati chiamano "biomagnificazione":la tossina che si accumula nei tessuti degli animali in concentrazioni sempre maggiori man mano che risale la catena alimentare.

    Considera il fitoplancton, le alghe microscopiche che sono alla base di quasi tutte le reti trofiche dell'oceano.

    Il fitoplancton contaminato da DDT viene mangiato dallo zooplancton, che pesci e balene consumano a migliaia.

    Nel 1969, le spedizioni di jack mackerel dalla California meridionale sono state richiamate perché i livelli di DDT erano pari a 10 parti per milione, o ppm:il doppio di quello che la Food and Drug Administration degli Stati Uniti considerava sicuro per il consumo in quel momento.

    I tumori hanno iniziato a comparire sui pesci che si nutrono di fondo come l'ombrina bianca.

    In quello stesso anno, pellicani marroni della California, che mangiano il pesce, deposto le uova sull'isola di Anacapa con sostanze chimiche ripartite dal DDT in media 1, 200 ppm.

    Gli scienziati hanno scoperto che le sostanze chimiche hanno portato a gusci d'uovo così sottili che i pulcini sarebbero morti. Anche le aquile calve erano scomparse dalle Isole del Canale, insieme ai falchi pellegrini e ai pellicani bruni.

    Allo stesso modo, leoni marini con più di 1, 000 ppm nel loro grasso stavano dando alla luce cuccioli prematuramente. I tursiopi avevano concentrazioni fino a 2, 000 ppm.

    I dirigenti di Montrose hanno difeso aggressivamente il DDT negli anni '60 mentre il pubblico faceva i conti con queste nuove allarmanti preoccupazioni sulle catene alimentari e sugli ecosistemi avvelenati.

    Hanno detto in lettere ed editoriali che il DDT ha svolto un ruolo vitale nella società se usato correttamente e non era una seria minaccia per la salute umana. Hanno accusato gli ambientalisti di tattiche intimidatorie e informazioni fuorvianti e hanno propagandato la reputazione dell'azienda di produrre il miglior DDT al mondo, un grado tecnico venduto ad altre aziende che lo avrebbero poi diluito in insetticidi specifici.

    L'azienda riforniva i governi dal Brasile all'India, loro hanno detto, e anche l'Organizzazione Mondiale della Sanità. I programmi internazionali di eradicazione della malaria si sono rivolti a Montrose per i rifornimenti.

    Ma dopo anni di intense indagini, government officials said they were convinced that the chemical posed unacceptable risks to the environment and potential harm to human health. Nel 1972, the U.S. finally banned the use of DDT.

    Demand was still strong in other countries, però, so the chemical plant in Los Angeles kept churning out more. Montrose managed to operate for another 10 years before the factory, looming over Normandie Avenue near Del Amo Boulevard, finally went dark.

    All'inizio degli anni '80, a young scientist at the California Regional Water Quality Control Board in Los Angeles heard whispers that Montrose once dumped barrels of toxic waste directly into the ocean. People at the time were hyper-focused on the contamination problems posed by poorly treated sewage, but Allan Chartrand was curious about the deep-sea dumping and started poking around.

    He called Montrose, and to his surprise, the staff pulled out all their files. He and a team of regulatory scientists combed through volumes of shipping logs, which showed that more than 2, 000 barrels of DDT-laced sludge were dumped each month. They did the math:Between 1947 and 1961, as much as 767 tons of DDT could have gone into the ocean.

    "We found actual photos of the workers at 2 in the morning dumping—not only dumping barrels off of the barges in the middle of the Santa Monica Basin, " Egli ha detto, "but before they would dump the barrels, they would take a big ax or hatchet to them, and cut them open on purpose so they would sink."

    On a recent morning, Chartrand rummaged through stacks of yellowing papers and reports detailing everything he had discovered so many decades ago. Now a seasoned eco-toxicologist in Seattle, he never understood why all this information wound up gathering dust—undigitized and largely forgotten.

    He pulled out faded reports that his team had published from 1985 to 1989, summarizing what they had found at Montrose and in the water quality control board's own records. "This makes my heart sing, " Egli ha detto, as he reread conclusions that still resonate today.

    Chartrand said he was astonished to learn this kind of activity was allowed. Federal ocean dumping laws dated back to 1886, but the rules were focused on clearing the way for ship navigation. It wasn't until the Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act of 1972, also known as the Ocean Dumping Act, that environmental impacts were considered.

    Dumping industrial chemicals near Catalina was an accepted practice for decades.

    Landfills could hold only so much, and people were concerned about burning toxics into the air—but the Pacific Ocean seemed a good alternative. Explosives, oil refinery waste, trash and rotting meats all went into the ocean, along with beryllium, various acid sludges, even cyanide.

    Dilution is the solution to pollution, the saying used to go, ma a che prezzo? The ocean covers more than 70% of the planet, but it can absorb only so much. What we eat, what we breathe is ultimately dictated by what we do to the sea.

    "It's just sad, sad, sad, " Chartrand said. "When stuff's being dumped offshore like that, it's in the dead of night, nobody's seeing it. It's out of sight, out of mind."

    Per anni, a company called California Salvage docked at the Port of Los Angeles, loaded up Montrose's DDT waste and hauled everything out to sea. Workers were instructed to dump in a designated spot, dubbed Dumpsite No. 1, that was about 10 nautical miles northwest of Catalina.

    But compliance inspections were infrequent, and crews sometimes took shortcuts. Chartrand discovered notes from California Salvage indicating they had decided to dump elsewhere because Dumpsite No. 1 was in line of a naval weapons firing range.

    The report concluded that these companies likely dumped in closer, much shallower waters.

    "Our report caught them red-handed, " Chartrand said. "Here I was this young guy—newly married, just had my first kid, got my new job at the water quality control board—heard about this dumping, went down to Montrose ... and it very quickly got so much bigger than me."

    Nel 1990, a few years after Chartrand compiled his reports, the Environmental Protection Agency teamed up with the state and launched a court battle against Montrose and a number of other companies under the Superfund law. Environmental groups expected the lawsuit—the largest in U.S. history alleging natural resource damages from chemical dumping—to be a landmark case in resolving coastal pollution issues.

    Chartrand and dozens of others were pulled in to testify. Science was disputed in court, evidence debated, expertise challenged. In numerous depositions, former factory workers were grilled on how they operated.

    Bernard Bratter, a Montrose plant superintendent, described how they would call California Salvage to dump its acid waste in bulk:"The trucks would come in, we'd load the trucks, they would then haul them down to the harbor where they had their barges, and the truck would unload into the barge, and when there was enough liquid in the barge, they'd haul the barge out to the specified area in the ocean and release the acid."

    Montrose officials, who had filed counterclaims, asked the court to exclude the evidence presented on ocean dumping—arguing that such dumping wasn't relevant.

    They said the government's natural resources damage claim was based solely on the release of DDT through the sewer system to the Palos Verdes shelf, and that attorneys could not prove that Montrose's disposal of DDT-contaminated waste into the deep ocean actually hurt various bird species.

    They also questioned Chartrand's calculations of how much DDT went into the ocean and made the point that there was nothing secret or illegal about the dumping at the time. Il governo, loro hanno detto, allowed this to happen.

    In an interoffice correspondence in 1985, Samuel Rotrosen, Montrose's president at the time, wrote that "it is true that from 1947, when the plant started up, until sometime in the 1950s we disposed of our waste sulfuric acid at sea through California Salvage Company who barged it out to state-approved dumping areas.

    "We stopped this disposal after we installed our acid-recovery plant, at which time we sold the acid to fertilizer makers, " he said. "Because our acid contained traces of DDT (50-250 ppm) ... the fertilizer producers would no longer take it, and so we disposed of it at landfills."

    As the court battle waged on, a handful of curious scientists kept trying to solve the DDT questions at the bottom of the ocean.

    Chartrand did not have a deep-sea robot, but he figured out a way to collect sediment samples and clumps of tar by dragging a large otter trawl net along the seafloor. He also took samples of rattails, kelp bass and other fish from different depths of the ocean.

    He called Robert Risebrough, a legend among DDT scientists whose testimonies in the 1960s and early 1970s helped Congress understand why the chemical should be banned. Risebrough, a UC Santa Cruz research ecologist at the time, ran the samples and authored a sweeping study. He confirmed the existence of considerable concentrations of DDT chemicals in both the sediments and the "tar cakes" by the dumpsites.

    It was unclear how much the DDT could move through the water at such depths, where there is little oxygen, Egli ha detto, but the dumping was close enough to the Channel Islands that the upwelling of deeper water common in this area could stir up what enters the food chain.

    And if the barrels were indeed punctured, Ha aggiunto, some of the sludge could have leaked out on its way down to the seafloor.

    He had a strong suspicion that the disappearance of bald eagles from Catalina was connected to the dumping operations, but he didn't have the data to confirm it. DDT contamination was also significantly higher in birds that fed on fish, compared with birds that ate mostly rodents and prey on land—another clue that the DDT from the ocean dumping was harming wildlife.

    He called for more studies to connect the dots, but Chartrand had run out of funding. Chartrand held on to what he could—even the remaining samples that neither he nor Risebrough could bear to throw away. Some of that deep sea sediment has yet to be tested.

    "They're in a deep freeze now, but because it's DDT, even though it's been 30, 40 years, they're still valid, " Chartrand said. "If we could get the funding, those are still worth running."

    "They were supposed to take it out to sea. I think beyond the Continental Shelf. But there was a common joke among people that they only took it as far as they needed to, just out of sight, and started dumping right there."—Deposition of Ferdinand Suhrer, Montrose employee, 30 luglio 1996

    M. Indira Venkatesan, a geochemist at UCLA who studied how chemicals moved through the sea, had taken one of these samples in the early 1990s and run her own analyses. Lei, pure, concluded there must be a DDT source in the ocean much larger than just what had come out of the sewage closer to shore.

    She collected additional sediment cores from the seafloor by a manual pulley that her technicians and graduate students spent hours pulling up. Her team distinguished the DDT "fingerprint" for Montrose's ocean-dumped waste and discussed the upward and downward diffusion of DDT in the sediments.

    "It gets resuspended and remobilized. That's why you see it all over the basin, " she said. "I knew, I just knew, this DDT source was significant, just from the chemical analysis, but we couldn't show the extent of the dumping, nor the number of barrels."

    Back in court, the arguments were focusing on the more tangible:the hundreds of tons of DDT and PCBs, another toxic chemical, that had been released two miles off the coast of Palos Verdes where the sewage emptied into the ocean. Many saw the need to make this public health problem—much closer to shore, with visible harm to humans and the ecosystem—a top priority.

    The site—spread across more than 17 square miles—was declared a Superfund cleanup in 1996. About 200 feet deep, it was considered one of the most complicated hazard sites in the United States—at least three times deeper than similar Superfund sites in Boston and New York harbors.

    By late 2000, the parties decided to settle. They negotiated a consent decree midway through trial—no sides admitting fault, with an agreement that more than $140 million would be paid by Montrose, several other companies that owned or operated a share of the plant, and local governments led by the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts.

    The settlement—one of the largest in the nation for an environmental damage claim—would pay for cleanup, habitat restoration and education programs for people at risk of eating contaminated fish.

    "This Decree was negotiated ... in good faith at arm's length to avoid the continuation of expensive and protracted litigation and is a fair and equitable settlement of claims which were vigorously contested, " according to the decree, which mentioned that the damage claim includes "any ocean dumpsites used for disposing of wastes from the Montrose Plant Property."

    Attorneys representing Montrose, when contacted by The Times, declined to comment on the new underwater data and noted that the ocean claims related to the DDT operation were resolved 20 years ago. Litigation continues to this day over other impacts from the former plant. In agosto, a $56.6 million settlement was finally reached over groundwater contamination.

    Back at UCLA, on a recent morning in the geology building, Venkatesan thought ruefully back to those DDT years. KCBS had run a local news series on the barrels, and The Times followed the story for a brief period.

    The information caught the attention of Assemblyman Tom Hayden, D-Santa Monica, the 1960s activist turned lawmaker who married Jane Fonda and was remembered as "the radical inside the system." Per un po 'di anni, he pushed for more information about the barrels and an action plan, but so many unchecked environmental problems demanded attention back then.

    Even Venkatesan got pulled away. As public concerns shifted from water to air pollution, her research focus changed to aerosols.

    She had tried for a while longer to get the word out—giving public lectures in Santa Monica bookstores and telling whoever would listen that the deep ocean also needed healing.

    "I didn't know what to do with this data; I felt bad, " she said. "As scientists, we thought we could leave it to the politicians and the government to do their job.... But if the government is not proactive, then people don't care. If people don't care, then the government doesn't do anything."

    Now that she's retired, her filing cabinets—filled with her work since she started in 1975—have been moved into a basement at UCLA. She recently reviewed the data that the UC Santa Barbara researchers had uncovered with deep-sea robots, which validated Chartrand's estimates, as well as her own.

    She held out her hands and said she was trembling with excitement, knowing that people might care about this issue again.

    "Disposing any waste, where you don't see and forget about it, does not solve the problem, " she said. "The problem eventually comes back to haunt us."

    One afternoon in Santa Barbara, hunched over a computer humming with data, Valentine and Veronika Kivenson, un dottorato di ricerca student in marine science, scrolled through the eerie images they had gathered underwater.

    They leaned in to examine an iciclelike anomaly growing off one of the barrels—a "toxicle, " they called it—and wondered about the gas that bubbled out when the robot snapped one off. To have gas supersaturated in and around these barrels so deep underwater, where the pressure was 90 times greater than above ground, was unsettling. They couldn't help but feel like they were poking at a giant Coke can ready to explode.

    One thing was clear, Kivenson said:This stuff is spreading. She had tried to collect sediment many meters from the barrels as a baseline to compare the samples collected right next to the source. But the baseline turned out to also have similarly high concentrations of DDT—most of them higher than the permissible threshold established by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    "These barrels do seem to be leaking over time, " she said. "This toxic waste is just kind of bubbling down there, seeping, stillante, I don't know what word I want to use. ... It's not a contained environment."

    So much of this data, collected in 2011 and then again in 2013, came down to timing and good luck:The underwater robots had been on loan for a different project, but that research cruise was ahead of schedule, so they had a window of extra time to explore.

    A scientist involved in the discovery of the Titanic happened to be on board, so he helped them program the robots on where to go and how to search for the barrels. A marine geochemistry lab at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution ran the samples, and Kivenson, whose graduate fellowship and tuition were the only funding for this research, analyzed them for her Ph.D.

    She tracked down the patent for the DDT acid waste that supposedly went into the barrels. She combed through EBay for out-of-print research books on ocean dumping and flipped through rolls of microfilm in the archive rooms of court buildings and government agencies.

    She validated Venkatesan's conclusion that the DDT near the barrels did not have the same characteristics as the Superfund site—ruling out the possibility that this was just DDT from Palos Verdes that somehow traveled farther into the ocean and settled onto the deep seafloor. One key difference was that the barrel samples contained no PCBs, which are abundant in the contamination near the sewage outfall.

    Each barrel seemed to contain acid waste with about 0.5% to 2% technical-grade DDT—which, at half a million barrels, would amount to a total of 384 to 1, 535 tons of DDT on the seafloor. The distribution was patchy; one hot spot had a concentration of DDT that was 40 times higher than the highest level of surface sediment contamination recorded at the Superfund site.

    Tutto detto, she concluded that the total amount of DDT from the dumping seemed comparable to the estimated 870 to 1, 450 tons that had been released through the sewer.

    But in the end, these are still extrapolations—we don't know how much is actually down there, said Kivenson, who published these findings last year in the journal Environmental Science &Technology and is now a postdoctoral fellow at Oregon State University. Logical next steps would be to somehow map and identify just how many barrels there are, determine any hot spots, and study how much the chemical is leaking and spreading and accumulating.

    Valentine tried calling those with the power to do something about these barrels:the EPA, which has been in charge of cleaning up the Superfund site. But the EPA, si scopre, hasn't even figured out what to do with the DDT problem that got all the attention and millions of settlement dollars. After more than 20 years of meetings and high-level studies, the site off the Palos Verdes shore has become its own controversial saga.

    A pilot experiment more than a decade ago to bury the DDT under a thick cap of clean sand showed mixed results. Then sampling in 2009 suggested that most of the DDT had mysteriously vanished—prompting a burst of headlines and more internal paralysis. The longtime project manager unexpectedly retired, and many of the scientists who had dedicated decades of their careers to the chemical have also either retired or moved on.

    Molti, when reached, said they had not been involved with the site for a number of years.

    "I feel like something's happened at the site; it just sort of died. It's been very weird, " said Robert Eganhouse, a research chemist at the U.S. Geological Survey who had been studying the Superfund site and the breakdown rates of DDT since the 1970s.

    His last meaningful exchange with the EPA was in late 2016, when he submitted an immense amount of data and a final synthesis report for the site—a research endeavor that took more than eight years and cost millions of dollars. Fino ad oggi, Eganhouse, who recently retired, is not quite sure what the EPA did with this information.

    Judy Huang, the Superfund's project manager for the past decade, when reached by The Times, directed questions to regional headquarters.

    In an email, an EPA spokeswoman said the agency had suspended capping efforts and collected new data that showed twice as much DDT as the 2009 results. The EPA is now reassessing its approach:"We are updating our evaluation of the mechanisms of how the DDTs and PCBs in the sediment impact human health and the environment in this complex system."

    Intanto, projects to restore local kelp forests, zone umide, seabirds and underwater habitats have been supported over the years with the settlement money, as well as education outreach that helped prevent anglers and vulnerable communities from eating poisoned fish.

    Fish remain contaminated, but the concentrations seem to be slowly going down, according to findings from the EPA's most recent five-year review of the site, released last fall. The bald eagles and peregrine falcons are coming back after years of human assistance, and nature seems to be healing itself over time.

    After all these years of costly stops and stalls, some think a so-called monitored natural recovery approach might just be the best solution. The EPA plans to start a new feasibility study that aims to lead to a final cleanup strategy. That study is not expected to be published for another four years.

    Marco Oro, who had championed the DDT problem as a marine scientist since the 1990s, could barely find the words to describe how he felt about the attempted cleanup of the Palos Verdes shelf.

    "To have the EPA say, 25 anni dopo, that maybe the best thing to do is to just let nature take its course is, francamente, nothing short of nauseating, " Egli ha detto.

    When asked about the barrels, he was so shocked he had to pause and grab a calculator to process the amount of DDT that could be in the deep ocean. At an absolute minimum, Egli ha detto, there needs to be further investigation into how much is actually down there and how much this dumping has harmed the ecosystem.

    Gold, who is now Gov. Gavin Newsom's deputy secretary for coast and ocean policy, said he had heard stories of illegal dumping back when he was helping state and federal officials build the case against Montrose. But there was no firsthand evidence in the 1990s, Egli ha detto, nor a sense of whether it was five barrels, 10 or 20.

    "Nobody in their worst nightmares, " Egli ha detto, "ever thought there would be half a million barrels of DDT waste dumped into the ocean off of L.A. County's coast."

    For scientists today, DDT poses a new generation of complications. Dilution, sembra, just means the problem re-accumulates elsewhere. In the environmental health laboratory at San Diego State's School of Public Health, Eunha Hoh recently discovered the chemical had wound its way into dolphins in unexpected ways.

    Marine mammals, come gli umani, nurse their young and live long lives. Slow to evolve, their long-term health is a window into the lasting impacts of chronic exposure and accumulation—and how these chemicals get passed onto babies. As some of the largest predators of the sea, they're also an important indicator of the ocean's overall health.

    So when Hoh sampled the blubber of eight adult dolphins that had lived deeper off the coast of Southern California, she was surprised to find significant amounts of 45 DDT-related compounds. Every dolphin she tested had washed up dead—and had accumulated much more of these chemicals than dolphins tested in Brazil and elsewhere around the world.

    "DDT contamination—is it really going down in Southern California? Can we really say that, or are we missing something, " said Hoh, who also serves on the California Ocean Protection Council's science advisory team. "Sure it was banned decades ago, it might be manageable globally, but Southern California? We're different. Our ocean is so much more polluted with DDT. We cannot just say, 'That's done; we can move on to other things.'"

    Hoh's expertise is in discovering new chemicals, but she remains mystified by how DDT keeps reappearing in new and unexpected ways. In cui si, she often wonders, is all this DDT coming from?

    When she first heard about the barrels scattered across the seafloor, it was as if someone finally handed her missing pieces to a puzzle that had never quite added up.

    The questions came tumbling out. If that much more DDT is out there but forgotten, and no one knows to study it, lei disse, how will we ever understand the true legacy of this chemical?

    Current monitoring shows that the local ecosystem, su tutto, is stable. But what's unclear are these long-term unknowns, said Keith Maruya, who co-authored the dolphin study and retired last year as the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project's head of chemistry.

    "It's not like something's going off the cliff. But what we don't know is whether these things are going to have a longer-term, more subtle effect—are some populations really, really slowly going to be declining?" he said. "We don't know the answer. Inoltre, we don't really have the tools yet to answer that question fully."

    He jolted up in his chair when the discovery of the barrels came up in a recent conversation.

    "Wow. Wait, how many did they find? I need to write this down."

    He jotted a few numbers, then silently compared this with the known quantity of DDT dumped at the Superfund site.

    "If nobody accounted for this second source ... if you've got twice the amount, " Egli ha detto, thinking aloud. "It's such a staggering number, but what does this mean? ... The bottom line is always going to be:So what? We have a chemical out there, so what?"

    At the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, in a developmental biology and environmental toxicology lab overlooking the sea, Amro Hamdoun has been pondering this question for much of his life.

    He's found through molecular studies that "persistent organic pollutants, " like flame retardants and DDT, can block a key protein from eliminating toxins from the human body—a clue, forse, into why they bioaccumulate. Even in small amounts, these contaminants could interfere with the human body's natural ability to defend itself.

    Hamdoun teaches "Silent Spring" and DDT to his students as an example of how the world used to be—but can't help but wonder how much the jobs and science of the future will be dealing with these messes of the past.

    "There's a broader problem of thinking of the ocean as this unlimited garbage dump that's going to take up our CO2, take up our mercury, deal with the plastic that we don't throw away properly, be a dumping ground for pesticides, deal with whatever is in runoff—and that our health is going to be separable from that, " he said. "But what we're learning more and more is that our health and the ocean's health are pretty inseparable."

    At what point, chiese, does it become our prerogative, as people who live in a shared society, to decide what it is that we want to put in our environment—and our bodies?

    He leaned forward in his chair, hands clasped, head bowed, like Valentine and Chartrand and so many who came before.

    "These chemicals are still out there, and we haven't figured out what to do, " he said. "They are an issue, and we still don't have a plan."

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