Bull City
A fine fellow
Jim, I haven't see oil bubble up naturally into the environment since the intro to the "The Beverly Hillbillies" TV show. Somehow, I think it's better to keep it in the ground.I remember being on a job in Anchorage for a month in late 1990. All the locals I met in the bar after work were talking about what a bonanza the spill had been for the local economy. Even the fishermen said catches were better because the fishery had recovered a lot in the year it was shut. Plus all their fishing boats were chartered to support the clean up. Nobody had a bad word to say about Exxon. I wonder if there is any significant environmental damage that remains 30+ years later? Mother Nature is pretty good at cleaning up crude oil, which is actually a 'natural' substance unlike man-made 'forever chemicals', if she is given enough time. The whole disaster may actually have been a net gain for Alaska... (with apologies to any of you Greenpeace types here)