Long-lost shells from carrier a concern in NYCBy Richard Pyle - The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Jan 14, 2008 21:04:11 EST
NEW YORK — Before the city’s Sanitation Department starts building a new garbage-transfer station on the edge of New York harbor, it may have to clean up something more potentially explosive than rancid food that stayed too long on the shelf, says a state lawmaker.
Back on March 6, 1954, hundreds of tons of Korean War-vintage munitions were being loaded off the aircraft carrier Bennington when a sudden storm caused a barge to capsize and break loose, spilling its cargo. By the time the barge was found upside down six miles away, it was empty.
About 400 anti-aircraft shells were recovered by divers at the loading site eight months later, but as many as 14,000 more were strewn along the bottom and never found, said State Assemblyman Bill Colton, a Democrat from Brooklyn.
Colton said he was “deeply concerned” that dredging for the new shoreline waste facility could detonate live shells buried in the harbor silt, even after 54 years.
“It’s possible that 219 tons of anti-aircraft shells are still out there on the bottom, and we must make sure we’re not digging and dredging in a place where they go ka-poof,” Colton said Monday. “It’s an unknown hazard and could be a catastrophe.”
Rest of article at:
http://www.navytimes.com/news/2008/01/ap_lostshells_080114/