Coast Guard investigating report of tar balls on Makaha Beach
MAKAHA, OAHU (HawaiiNewsNow) -
Coast Guard members are continuing to investigate a report of scattered tar balls discovered on a 1,000-yard stretch of Makaha Beach, Friday.
Beachgoers contacted Coast Guard Sector Honolulu Wednesday evening to report tar balls washed ashore. The tar balls reportedly range in size up to 1-inch. Sector deployed personnel from their Incident Management Division to respond and assess the beach. They also notified partners at the State Department of Land and Natural Resources.
The Coast Guard takes every report of oil in the water or in the form of tar balls very seriously as we work with our partners to keep the Hawaiian Islands pristine, said Chief Petty Officer John Ng, from the Sector Honolulu Incident Management Division. Coast Guard pollution investigators have taken samples of the tar balls and sent them to the Coast Guard Marine Safety Lab in New London, Connecticut, to be compared to samples on file in an attempt to identify the source of the oil.
Tar balls are formed when an accumulation of oil is battered by wave action until it breaks apart in the form of small round clumps. Tar balls are generally not associated with fresh oil; rather, they are usually the result of oil that has been present in the water for some time. Some tar balls are the result of spills while others come from naturally occurring ocean seeps.
http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/29684470/coast-guard-investigating-report-of-tar-balls-on-makaha-beach