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View Full Version : Mystery of the orange substance invading from skies in one of the world's most remote



Serpo
7th August 2011, 04:57 PM
By Mail On Sunday Reporter (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Mail+On+Sunday+Reporter)

Last updated at 4:59 PM on 7th August 2011



(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2023236/Mysterious-orange-goo-washes-Alaska-village.html#comments)


A strange orange substance raining down from the skies has left villagers in one of the world’s most remote areas mystified.

The alien invader was found in rain buckets in Kivalina, an Eskimo community in Alaska, and floating in the harbour, creating 100ft-by-10ft swathes of what one resident described as ‘bright neon orange’.

The news attracted all the townspeople, keen to get a glimpse of the phenomenon that covered much of the harbor and then began washing ashore on Wednesday.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/08/07/article-2023236-0D4E023C00000578-202_470x288.jpg What is it? The Coast Guard says the orange substance is not man-made and might be some type of algae


On Thursday it rained, and residents found the orange matter floating on top of the rain buckets they use to collect drinking water. It was also found on one roof, leading them to believe whatever it was, it was airborne, too.
By Friday, the orange substance in the lagoon had dissipated or washed out to sea, and what was left on ground had dried to a powdery substance.
Residents, who have been left mystified by these events, have been advised to boil drinking water and to keep children away from the substance.
The Coast Guard already has ruled out that the orange material, which some people described as having a semi-solid feel to it, was man-made or a petroleum product.
Village administrator Janet Mitchell has said that algae is the best guess.
She voiced the main concern of the villagers, which is that the substance might be harmful: 'What will it do to fish, which villagers will soon start catching to stock up for winter, or the caribou currently being hunted, or the berries? We rely 100 percent on subsistence.'
A further complication is that reserves are running low in the city's two water tanks.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/08/06/article-2023236-0D53E2BF00000578-295_470x288.jpg Precaution: The population of Kivalina Alaska has been advised to boil drinking water after a strange substance rained from the sky into the harbour

The tanks need to be filled this summer from the Wulik River to make it through the winter. Pumping cannot resume until the orange substance has been identified.

Emanuel Hignutt, a state-employed chemist, said: ‘At this point it’s a mystery.’
'There are a number of experts in the areas who can identify if it's an organic material, for example, and what species this is. Perhaps it's not an organic material, and we're going to determine that as well.' Hignutt added.
Portions of the samples will also be sent to the University of Alaska Fairbanks and to a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration lab in South Carolina for testing.


http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/08/06/article-2023236-0D53E31400000578-982_472x318.jpg Testing: Samples of the mysterious orange substance have been sent for analysis


63-year-old Kivalina resident Austin Swan said: 'This is the first for Kivalina, as far as I know.'

Swan helped collect some samples for testing, and grabbed some of the substance in his gloved hand.

'It was really light, with a powdery look to it, and it was just floating on there, all bunched up together,' he said. 'It looked like it could blow away very easily.'

Swan added that some of the material had an oil-like sheen to it.

Kivalina wasn't alone in reporting the strange orange substance last Wednesday.

Shannon Melton said she was boating on the Buckland River about 150 miles southeast of Kivalina, and the river was not its normal color. 'It was orange looking.' she said.

She took the boat out again on Thursday to go berry picking, and said the river had returned to its normal color, but some of the creeks off the river still had the orange tinge to them.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2023236/Mysterious-orange-goo-washes-Alaska-village.html#ixzz1UO2H2EF8

Eyebone
7th August 2011, 05:50 PM
What is it with that place?

Two, three years ago there was some muck floating around that nobody could figure out.

osoab
7th August 2011, 06:49 PM
So that's where all my orange push pops went.

BrewTech
7th August 2011, 07:12 PM
It's probably intelligent life from another planet and humans are so fixated on preconceptions of what ET would look like that we fail to realize... ha ha.

Santa
7th August 2011, 09:19 PM
It's probably intelligent life from another planet and humans are so fixated on preconceptions of what ET would look like that we fail to realize... ha ha.

Haha. You think beer gut is from beer? No. Gut flora. Entire colonies of aliens living in our guts, motivating us to do bad things like... drink beer.

BrewTech
7th August 2011, 09:28 PM
Haha. You think beer gut is from beer? No. Gut flora. Entire colonies of aliens living in our guts, motivating us to do bad things like... drink beer.

Hey! Watch your mouth, mister...

Shorty Harris
8th August 2011, 05:10 AM
Sounds to me as tho the ptb might want this lil town emptied of all its inhabitants for some reason. Drilling? oil? Watch, somewhere down the line we'll be hearing how the entire town had to be relocated. Then there will be a vast oil field discovered strangely enough..right where the town use to sit..jeez, imagine that, what luck.

Dogman
8th August 2011, 06:00 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9a2iZSS488

MNeagle
8th August 2011, 09:50 PM
update:

Alaskan village's mystery substance is mass of eggs, lab says

(CNN) -- A mysterious orange substance that washed up on the shores of an Alaskan village last week was a mass of microscopic, invertebrate eggs, possibly those of a small crustacean, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration lab said Monday.

More testing will determine the species and whether the eggs -- whose appearance on the shores of Kivalina in northwest Alaska startled residents Wednesday -- are toxic, said Julie Speegle, representative of the NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center's Auke Bay Laboratories.

Residents of Kivalina, an Inupiat Eskimo village of about 430 people, found the substance in its lagoon -- giving the lagoon an orange sheen -- and clumps of the orange stuff on the beach. A resident who took pictures of the substance, Mida Swan, said last week that it had an oily feel, like baby oil.

Some residents said they also saw the substance in their rainwater-collection buckets after a Wednesday evening rain. No one knew what it was, the state Department of Environmental Conservation was notified and samples were sent to several labs (http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/08/05/mystery-substance-comes-to-shore-of-alaskan-village/).

With a high-powered microscope, it was easy "to identify this as 'animal,'" Jeep Rice, a lead NOAA scientist at the lab, said in a news release.

"We now think these are some sort of small crustacean egg or embryo, with a lipid oil droplet in the middle causing the orange color," Rice said. "So this natural. It is not chemical pollution; it is not a man-made substance."

Experts at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks, which received samples Monday, and a NOAA lab in South Carolina, due to receive them Tuesday, could soon shed light on the species and any toxicity, said Emanuel Hignutt, analytical chemistry manager for the state Environmental Health Laboratory.
"Certain organisms can produce toxins, and you can't tell if that's the case (here) until you know what species it is," Hignutt said.

Speegle said the species may be new to the area, or that it could be a native species whose eggs this time had an unusual color. The diameter of the eggs was 10 to 100 microns -- at least 10 times smaller than herring eggs, she said.

The substance appeared to have dissipated by Saturday, said Janet Mitchell, Kivalina city administrator.

RELATED TOPICS

Alaska (http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Alaska)
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (http://topics.cnn.com/topics/National_Oceanic_and_Atmospheric_Administration)
Earth Science (http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Earth_Science)


Mitchell said Monday that she is anxious to hear whether the eggs are toxic. Some of the substance was found in the Wulik River, which flows into the lagoon and is a source of the village's drinking water, she said. She has said the village would delay topping of its two water storage tanks, which it does every summer so that it has enough water for the winter.

"I still need to pump water and still need to know if it's safe," Mitchell said.

Kivalina is about 650 miles northwest of Anchorage, Alaska.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/08/08/alaska.mystery.substance/index.html?hpt=hp_p1&iref=NS1