Saturday, 5 January 2013

The Baltic Sea and Its History - Limestone to be added? - A Matter of Ecology

After WWF and various other "whistle blowers": But for "colleagial" exchange of information and some slight suspicions of something that can possibly be unturned:Concerning the Baltic sea and fish death: can it be that, on par with (synthetic) rubber production, that an unknown gasoline derivative (Xylitin? or some) has caused massive "unfruitful"/hostile conditions for fish to grow/find food there so that ALL attempts in restoring the fish banks of the Baltic Sea will fail? Xylitol is also a questioned substance of a derivative (sugar) kind that I don't want to enter the discussion of! Good luck with investigations! Have a nice day! (Remember that polluters are dishonest and possibly hideous people and that GREAT CARE needs to be displayed in order to approach this!)And for seriousness more, that I've taken the med. doctors of epidemiology/bacteriolology/hygiene for slight alcohol tendencies, whether on the black side or the alcoholism itself! Salicylic acids of antbacteria products! Good?

I do not yet say that this story will produce these or other successes, just that I note a possible investigative angle! Alright? (Don't expect me to "toss and turn" to answer you. I have scarce time on my hands and "a bit" to do.)

I guess I withdraw from the above, while leaving the suspicion "alive" for those who want to investigate possible scenarios. While certainly not "still water" in the extreme "brackish" water sense (hence the storms, given the surface area that the winds affect), there may very well be governing principles in nature that regulates the beings fit for fresh waters and salty waters, respectively. Thus, I think most may be looking into what can fit into this Baltic Sea in terms of sea life able to cope with the salinity and the weak currents that probably bring in very little oxygen and nutrition. So what about the Dartmouth "Vade" play in the World and the Shakespeare creatures introduction to USA? I (deeply) respect the research restraints on the Baltic Sea and I have no need for extremities. That we consider this in peace and "enjoy that pace of research" connected to the whole area!

Informed suspicions of those "alive":
Suspected insertion of "unknown/poisoning chemical substances". Time: 1985, appx.

Suspect of pollution: Denmark. (USA is cleared, I think.)

Result: Fish death, other bio-deaths, vast brackish water bodies, dead Baltic Seas.

Pollution chemical: Kerosene, a hydrocarbons product, other name is paraffin, used also for "oil-lamps".

The pollution from Denmark or of the shores of Denmark, but under Danish pollution authorities may have taken place by the organisation of foreigners, like foreigners from Norway and USA and that pollution has happened by "delivery" with a specially designed "robot" vehicle.
The Baltic Sea has once been famous for the Swedish Silver, the Swedish silver herring, from what I can recall.

Suggested confirmation price tag: 20 Mn SEK for mainly a basin, naturalised and filled with sea water by direct filling system.

Now what? Yes, also check pollution records for the Baltic Sea nations. Other? Get the confirmation started.

Given the current situation of the Baltic Sea, I can recommend a qualified loading of crushed limestone straight from nature into the Baltic Sea as primary way for neutralising "damaging" effects to the Sea's ecology.

A suspected report from Denmark, 25. Dec. 1984(?, date uncertain): "They dumped 25 tons of paraffin onto the ocean (Baltic Sea) floor to prove that fishes could die!!!" This goes to the suspicions above.

Note: url: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Baltic_Sea
Note2: First to Facebook profile, then to Facebook note "by Leonardo F. Olsnes-Lea on Wednesday, 2 January 2013 at 03:21 CET."
Note3: Additional info over how any pollution may have taken place, i.e., by "robot" vehicle or other.

2 comments:

  1. Notes on Clupeiformes (Herring-like fish) catches even today: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Swedish_fish#Clupeiformes_.28Herring-like_fish.29 .

    Other: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%B8n#Herring_fisheries.2C_prosperity_and_decline .

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  2. Another: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herring - Herring (in the Baltic Sea also).

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