Environmental

NOAA Announces New Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Searchable Database Web Tool

Brings together multiple scientific data and analysis sets for public, researchers in one location

In this photo taken in June 2010, NOAA veterinarian Dr. Brian Stacy prepares to clean an oiled Kemp's Ridley turtle. Veterinarians and scientists from NOAA, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, and other partners working under the Unified Command captured heavily-oiled young turtles 20 to 40 miles offshore as part of ongoing animal rescue and rehabilitation efforts. The data they have collected on the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill under the Natural Resource Damage Assessment is now more easily available through the new DIVER on-line data warehouse. (Credit: NOAA and Georgia Department of Natural Resources.)In this photo taken in June 2010, NOAA veterinarian Dr. Brian Stacy prepares to clean an oiled Kemp’s Ridley turtle. Veterinarians and scientists from NOAA, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, and other partners working under the Unified Command captured heavily-oiled young turtles 20 to 40 miles offshore as part of ongoing animal rescue and rehabilitation efforts. The data they have…

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