The beaches of Alaska are piled with debris from the tsunami that
struck Japan on March 11, 2011, but restoration to their once pristine
condition has slowed, as funding remains scarce.
"The amount of
debris washing ashore has vastly exceeded most people's expectation...,"
said Chris Pallister, Vice President of the Gulf of Alaska Keeper, a
non-profit organization dedicated to cleaning marine debris from the
coastline of Alaska.
"As soon as the tsunami hit and we saw the
videos, we knew the northern Gulf of Alaska shoreline was going to get
inundated with tsunami debris," he said. "We said so at an international
marine debris conference in March 2011. Our assertion was largely
dismissed."
But Pallister's assertion has proved accurate as debris continues to wash ashore in massive quantities.
The
debris is no longer only lightweight items such as water bottles and
styrofoam. Beaches are now also littered with refrigerators, fuel tanks
and other large objects.
http://www.foxnews.com/weather/2013/02/18/tsunami-debris-litters-alaska-coast-clean-up-funds-insufficient/
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