Keyword: Pollution
Photo
ENV006-00016
Cleanup work on an oil spill in the Texas Intercoastal Canal, using a “control boom”.
Photo
ENV006-00013
Cleanup work on an oil spill in the Texas Intercoastal Canal, using a “control boom”.
Photo
ENV006-00014
Cleanup work on an oil spill in the Texas Intercoastal Canal, using a “control boom”.
Photo
ENV006-00012
An oil slick near a Texas holding facility.
Photo
ENV006-00010
Cleanup work on an oil spill in the Texas Intercoastal Canal, using a “control boom”.
Photo
ENV006-00011
Cleanup work on an oil spill in the Texas Intercoastal Canal, using a “control boom”.
Photo
ENV006-00009
Cleanup work on an oil spill in the Texas Intercoastal Canal, using a “control boom”.
Photo
ENV004-00020
Barges filled with hazardous chemicals move through the Intercoastal Waterway in Sabine NWR every day. In addition to marsh erosion, one spill could destroy the ecosystem.
Photo
ENV004-00021
Barges filled with hazardous chemicals move through the Intercoastal Waterway in Sabine NWR every day. In addition to marsh erosion, one spill could destroy the ecosystem.
Photo
ENV004-00016
Barges filled with hazardous chemicals move through the Intercoastal Waterway in Sabine NWR every day. In addition to marsh erosion, one spill could destroy the ecosystem.
Photo
ENV004-00014
Barges filled with hazardous chemicals move through the Intercoastal Waterway in Sabine NWR every day. In addition to marsh erosion, one spill could destroy the ecosystem.
Photo
ENV004-00015
Barges filled with hazardous chemicals move through the Intercoastal Waterway in Sabine NWR every day. In addition to marsh erosion, one spill could destroy the ecosystem.
Photo
ENV004-00009
Barges filled with hazardous chemicals move through the Intercoastal Waterway in Sabine NWR every day. In addition to marsh erosion, one spill could destroy the ecosystem.
Photo
ENV003-00053
DC3 planes blanket housing developments in marsh areas with a mixture of diesel fuel and malathion to kill off mosquitoes.
Photo
ENV003-00039
Vernal pools like this one in California’s central valley are home to a number of unique species that have carved their niche in these seasonally flooded areas. Development and pollution from agricultural run off threaten the vernal pool habitat.
Photo
ENV003-00028
Overview of the industrial area of Seattle, WA.
Photo
ENV003-00029
Overview of the ports of Seattle, WA.
Photo
ENV003-00010
DC3 planes blanket housing developments in marsh areas with a mixture of diesel fuel and malathion to kill off mosquitoes.
Photo
ENV003-00009
Flooding around an oil refinery near Old Ocean in Texas’ coastal plain.
Photo
ENV003-00008
DC3 planes blanket housing developments in marsh areas with a mixture of diesel fuel and malathion to kill off mosquitoes.
Photo
ENV003-00007
DC3 planes blanket housing developments in marsh areas with a mixture of diesel fuel and malathion to kill off mosquitoes.
Photo
ENV003-00004
The Houston ship channel flows through what used to be native coastal prairie. Industrial development and sprawl from the city have greatly reduced the range of the Attwater’s prairie-chicken and other wildlife to small pockets of grassland habitat.
Photo
ENV001-00151
A “tipi burner” burns scrap wood at a lumber mill near Canmore, Alberta, Canada.
Photo
ENV001-00004
Freshly-cut old-growth logs near a village on the Capim River in Brazil.
Photo
ENV001-00003
Smoke from a lumber mill and other industries in Paragominas, Brazil on the Amazon River.
Photo
BIR012-00002
Cormorants nest mid oil refineries in Houston, Texas.
Photo
ANI023-00018
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00019
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00016
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00017
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00015
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00014
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00013
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00011
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI023-00012
Mule deer outside the old arsenal building at Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR in Colorado. The area was declared a Superfund cleanup site because of pollution from the US Government’s chemical weapons manufacturing.
Photo
ANI009-00038
Biologists use a hook fastened to a pole to try and disentangle a female Northern fur seal at a rookery on St. George Island in Alaska’s Pribilof Islands. If she grows any more, she will die, and her pup will then die from starvation.