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The water will leave behind more trouble — a city filled with mold,

some of it toxic, the experts said. After other floods, researchers

found many buildings had to be stripped back to concrete, or razed.

" If you have a building half full of water, everything above the

water is growing mold. When it dries out, the rest grows mold, "

Zeliger said. " Most of the buildings will have to be destroyed. "

New Orleans' fouled water going into river, lake

Priority of pumping out city means no chance of cleaning water first

Katrina multimedia

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9227493/

Reuters • Close-up on Katrina

Tune in daily for a close-up look at the latest issues facing

officials and victims in the aftermath of Katrina.

MAPS OF THE REGION

• New Orleans: Before and after

• Newsweek: The view from above

• NOAA's view of the devastation

Updated: 1:36 p.m. ET Sept. 6, 2005

BATON ROUGE, La. - The brew of chemicals and human waste in the New

Orleans floodwaters will have to be pumped into the Mississippi

River or Lake Pontchartrain, raising the specter of an environmental

disaster on the heels of Hurricane Katrina, experts say.

The dire need to rid the drowned city of water could trigger fish

kills and poison the delicate wetlands near New Orleans and the Gulf

of Mexico at the mouth of the Mississippi.

State and federal agencies have just begun water-quality testing but

environmental experts say the vile, stagnant chemical soup that sits

in the streets of the city known as The Big Easy will contain traces

of everything imaginable.

" Go home and identify all the chemicals in your house. It's a very

long list, " said Ivor van Heerden, head of a Louisiana State

University center that studies the public health impacts of

hurricanes.

" And that's just in a home. Imagine what's in an industrial plant, "

he said. " Or a sewage plant. "

Gasoline, diesel, anti-freeze, bleach, human waste, acids, alcohols

and a host of other substances must be washed out of homes,

factories, refineries, hospitals and other buildings.

" There is a disease risk, " Mike Mc, head of the Louisiana

Department of Environmental Quality, told reporters Tuesday. He

added, though, that it was premature to call the floodwaters toxic,

and that better data should be available Thursday.

" Initial indications are that they are showing large numbers of

contaminants, " Mc said. " We are taking samples ... We expect

you're going to see quantities of fuel and gasoline. There are

sheens wherever you look. "

Rupture dangers

In Metairie, east of New Orleans, the floodwater is tea-colored,

murky and smells of burnt sulfur. A thin film of oil is visible in

the water.

Those who have waded into it say they could see only about 1 to 2

inches into the depths and that there was significant debris on and

below the surface.

Experts said the longer water sat in the streets, the greater the

chance gasoline and chemical tanks — as well as common containers

holding anything from bleach to shampoo — would rupture.

Officials have said it may take up to 80 days to clear the water

from New Orleans and surrounding parishes.

Van Heerden and Rodney Mallett, communications director for the

Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, say there do not

appear to be any choices other than to pump the water into Lake

Pontchartrain or the Mississippi River, which flows into the Gulf of

Mexico, a key maritime spawning ground.

" I don't see how we could treat all that water, " Mallett said.

The result could be an second wave of disaster for southern

Louisiana, said Harold Zeliger, a Florida-based chemical

toxicologist and water quality consultant.

" In effect, it's going to kill everything in those waters, " he said.

How much water New Orleans holds is open to question.

Van Heerden estimates it is billions of gallons. LSU researchers

will use satellite imagery and computer modeling to get a better fix

on the quantity.

Rush to get it out

Bio-remediation — cleaning up the water — would require the time and

expense of constructing huge storage facilities, considered an

impossibility, especially with the public clamor to get the water

out quickly.

Mallett said the Department of Environmental Quality was in the

unfortunate position of being responsible for protecting the

environment in a situation where that did not seem possible.

" We're not happy about it. But for the sake of civilization and

lives, probably the best thing to do is pump the water out, " he said.

The water will leave behind more trouble — a city filled with mold,

some of it toxic, the experts said. After other floods, researchers

found many buildings had to be stripped back to concrete, or razed.

" If you have a building half full of water, everything above the

water is growing mold. When it dries out, the rest grows mold, "

Zeliger said. " Most of the buildings will have to be destroyed. "

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