Catawba County is being asked to pay about $96,000 over four years to stop the algae, according to the Hickory Daily Record.
Officials and community members are working to help make sure one of North Idaho's lakes stays clean and safe for years to come.
BROOKE. WELL, PEOPLE TRYING TO ENJOY THIS WARM WEATHER AT SOME BEACHES IN OUR AREA COMING ACROSS SOMETHING BLACK AND STICKY ON THE SAND TAR WASHING UP ON THE SHORES OF BEACHES FROM LAKE WORTH TO ...
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Hosted on MSNSacred Lake of the Māori in New Zealand National Park Under Threat of Becoming Polluted: Visitor Contamination to BlameIts name, Rotomairewhenua, was given by the Ngāti Apa, a local Māori tribe. The name’s meaning: the lake of peaceful lands. To New Zealanders, and to the Māori, the small body of water is sacred and ...
LAKE WORTH BEACH, Fla ... “I thought it was a piece of algae or something,” Sanphy said. “I couldn’t get it off.” Boynton Beach Fire Rescue responded to reports of oil on its beach ...
First a river ran blood red. Now Argentina's beloved giant rodent, the capybara, has been coated in Hulk-green slime as ...
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Hosted on MSNJ&K: Dal Lake freezes as valley shivers in cold waveA severe cold wave has gripped the Kashmir Valley, with temperatures plummeting to sub-zero levels, freezing water bodies, ...
Catawba County and other lake-bordering counties are being asked to pay $96,547 to treat lyngbya in Lake Norman.
Hikers in New Zealand risk polluting the “clearest lake in the world” with a microscopic alga carried on their boots.
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