With oil slick still offshore, a frenzy of preparations
The Deepwater Horizon shortly before it collapsed into the Gulf of Mexico on April 22, 1010. The rig had been burning for two days before it sank. More photos. | Courtesy of Jon T. Fritz / MCT
By Maria Recio, Audra Burch, Joseph Goodman and Jim Wyss | McClatchy Newspapers
PANAMA CITY, Fla. — As Mother Nature kept the man-made oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico from making landfall, emergency workers along the Gulf Coast Tuesday stepped up their efforts to defend sensitive shorelines and oil giant BP began what could a months-long process to stanch the flow of crude from its runaway well.
Thousands of volunteers descended on the region to help avert a looming environmental crisis as meteorologists warned that the calm winds and mild seas that kept the two-week old oil spill relatively intact Tuesday could push the slick toward the Florida Panhandle on Thursday.
Officials at the Unified Area Command in Mobile, Ala., said there were unconfirmed reports that the oil sheen may have reached the Chandeleur Islands off the Louisiana coast — journalists overflying the area on Monday reported patches of oil visible within the islands. Small patches of what appeared to be rust-colored oil also were spotted in the channel between Cat Island and Ship Island, 11 miles south of Gulfport, Miss.
Weather models suggested, however, that the bulk of the slick won't make landfall before the end of the week, officials said.
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