Gas takes roughly a week to make the trip. This pipeline and another at th Street supplied billion cubic feet of gas last year—about half of what we used. A Freight Train It was carrying passenger baggage one afternoon in , and failed to stop at the Peekskill drawbridge, which was open. Two men were killed. Dead Bodies When homicides and suicides end up in the river during winter, they often stay underwater until April, when decomposition speeds up, bloating them with gases.
They then bob up, and currents have been known to drive them to nooks near the Seaport and Manhattan Bridge. Surveillance Systems The U. The gear pings signals out, and displays hits—indicating unidentified people or boats—on a video screen. Stripped Cars In the bad old high-crime days, a virtual fleet of auto carcasses ended up in the East River, near the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges. Where it cracks, the coast bristles with rusting steel reinforcement bars. Harbor divers have to watch themselves to avoid getting snagged or injured.
Random junk tends to collect in and around it: old tires, garbage cans, busted-up bicycles. It makes me want to go down there with teacups and set it up. Another Shipwreck Unidentified, at 37 feet. Hudson River Alligators The quaint wooden pilings you see at the edge of Manhattan, the ones that trace the outlines of long-gone piers, are a hazard in the making. Caption by Michon Scott.
These images from September 12, , and September 2, , compare conditions in the Hudson River near Ellis Island. In the wake of storms, sediment filled the river in Tropical Storm Lee formed over the Gulf of Mexico in early September and threatened southern Louisiana with heavy rain.
The storm also caused heavy rain in the U. Nearly a week after Hurricane Irene drenched New England, the river was spewing large amounts of muddy sediment into Long Island Sound. Image of the Day Water Severe Storms. Flowing past the city of Vancouver, the Fraser River delivers a thick plume of sediment to the Strait of Georgia. Comment below or Send us a Tip. NNYC Love. We rely on your support to make local news available to all. Donate Now.
David Cruz and Elizabeth Kim. A mere 1 percent of sunlight hitting the water's surface penetrates 3 feet down. This is largely the result of suspended soil, silt and clay. These particles enter the river through two pathways. During heavy rains, the tributaries that feed the river flow rapidly — washing new soil particles into the Hudson.
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