Anomalies orange causes Alaskan tumors

Villagers in Alaska (USA) tumultuous, scientists took on when an unknown orange substance washed up on the coast and appeared throughout the water in the village . But, the results of the inspection recently made people breathe.

From August 3, the radio information of Kivalina , Alaska village warned people about an orange wonderland along the town harbor. News spread quickly and made people worried about this anomalous phenomenon. Worse when a rain came and residents found this allergy appeared in a bucket of rainwater or settled on the roof.

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On August 3, Mida Swan provided AP with photos taken at the coast of Kivalina village, Alaska with exotic orange flakes (Photo: AP)

By August 5, orange heterosexuals had floated on the surface of the water disappearing or swept into the sea, the rest on the ground dried as a powder. This allergy is sampled and sent for testing at an Anchorage laboratory. Two samples were also transferred to Fairbanks University, Alaska and the Marine and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) laboratory for analysis.

In the absence of results, 374 residents kept wondering about the mystery that was happening to their village because even Kivalina's oldest people had never seen this phenomenon.

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This strange orange covering a fairly wide water area in Kivalina, Alaska (Photo: AP)

People worry if it is poison that harms fish that villagers will catch to reserve for the winter. Kivalina officials warned about keeping children away from exposure and people need to boil water when drinking.

The problem of drinking water caused a great confusion for the people of Kivalina because they did not store a lot of water in the city's reservoirs, however, they could not pump more water from the Wulik River into the tank when it was unknown. what?

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The orange substance is being tested by Emmanuel Hignutt of the Environmental Conservation Department in Anchorage, Alaska (Photo: AP)

As of August 8, concerns about pollutant chemicals when strange oranges appeared were dissolved when NOAA scientists said it was a huge amount of crustacean eggs.

"We think this is a small crustacean or embryo covered with orange oil," said Jeep Rice, a leading NOAA scientist . "So it's natural, not chemical." infection, not man-made substance " .

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Microscope image of orange heterosexuals helps scientists confirm this is crustacean eggs (Photo: Reuters)

Occasionally, nature also "pranks" people a lot to wake them up about environmental pollution.