Today’s Solutions: December 15, 2024

Residents and vacationers who frequent Santa Catalina Island were shocked to learn from a recent Los Angeles Times investigation that their shores were contaminated with poison from the nation’s largest DDT manufacturer who had dumped barrels of the chemical along the coast for almost 40 years. DDT can be particularly hazardous to marine ecosystems, so following a lawsuit, Santa Catalina is now looking for the best way to clean up this hazard. They seem to have found a starting place with the help of “underwater Roombas.”

A research team from Scripps Institution of Oceanography set off this week to deploy the underwater tools which are small devices, equipped with sonar, which crawl along the ocean floor and collect samples. 

Although the devices aren’t actually vacuuming up anything, they are providing valuable data about the extent and location of the chemical pollution. After two weeks of investigative exploration, the researchers should have enough information to understand the scope of the crisis and come up with an adequate clean-up plan.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Turning grief into hope with a video game that helps children cope with loss

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Children and young people are finding consolation for their deepest wounds in the most unlikely of places: a ...

Read More

4 simple steps to sharpen your mind and reduce dementia risk

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Dementia affects millions worldwide, with numbers expected to rise sharply in the coming years. While aging remains the ...

Read More

Collective grief is hard. Here’s how to deal with it

Grief and loss are emotions that we all experience on an individual level, and certain events may even induce shared grief among communities. Since ...

Read More

Bison return to Romania after more than two centuries

After 200 years of absence, the bison is once again a proud resident of Romania’s Carpathian Mountains. Though a less common sight than it ...

Read More