Item Description
Debris from the Japanese tsunami has apparently reached Kodiak, with several large oyster farm floats discovered by local beachcombers and fishermen Dave Kubiak and Alexus Kwatchka, according to a story by KMXT radio. Washington-based oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer, an expert in tracking ocean flotsam, sent photographs of the floats to the national media in Japan and was told they were authentic. “They were washed out in the tsunami from oyster-grower farms,” Ebbesmyer told KMXT.
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Archive
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Geolocation
47.750087, -123.7510225
Latitude
47.750087
Longitude
-123.75102249999998
Location
47.750087,-123.75102249999998
Media Creator Username
KH
Media Creator Realname
KH
Frequency
Archive Once
Scope
One Page
Language
English
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English Title
First Japanese tsunami trash may have reached Olympic Peninsula | Alaska Dispatch News
English Description
Debris from the Japanese tsunami has apparently reached Kodiak, with several large oyster farm floats discovered by local beachcombers and fishermen Dave Kubiak and Alexus Kwatchka, according to a story by KMXT radio. Washington-based oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer, an expert in tracking ocean flotsam, sent photographs of the floats to the national media in Japan and was told they were authentic. “They were washed out in the tsunami from oyster-grower farms,” Ebbesmyer told KMXT.
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frequency | Once | scope | Page | email | | language | English|
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URI
http://wayback.archive-it.org/2438/20110301000000/http://www.adn.com/article/first-japanese-tsunami-trash-may-have-reached-olympic-peninsula
Attribution URI
http://www.adn.com/article/first-japanese-tsunami-trash-may-have-reached-olympic-peninsula