For decades, an oxygen-depleted dead zone that is harmful to sea life has appeared in the Gulf of Mexico in a region off the coasts of Louisiana and Texas. This year, it’s larger than average, federal scientists announced in a report Thursday.

This year, the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico entered into the top third of largest dead zones in records that go back 38 years, (…)

The 2024 zone in the Gulf is about 6,705 square miles, which is an area roughly the size of New Jersey.

The latest measurement is about 1,000 square miles larger than NOAA’s prediction in June, calculated using discharge from the Mississippi River and nutrient runoff data from the U.S. Geological Survey.

  • NegativeInf@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    It is generally. But usually mitigated by current to churn it up. Make it light. And frothy.

    I’m from that area of Texas. People only go to beaches around there to show off their jeeps and get arrested for throwing beer bottles at each other. The water is like jellyfish and dead seaweed soup.

    And just this week we were warned of higher than normal levels of flesh eating bacteria!