Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 01, 1991, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Ice floe floats
Soviet station
to U.S. shore
kreuwrai
JUNEAU, Alas
ka (Al’J An leu
floe carrying an
abandoned Soviet
research station, hundreds ot
drums of fuol and potentially
hazardous chomicals has boon
found aftor missing for more
than throe weeks off northern
Alaska.
The island of ico was break
ing up and half the structures
and all the barrels were miss
ing, the Coast Guard said.
A flight crew who spotted the
scientific station Sunda, about
180 miles west of Burrow, said
no drums were sighted and
there was no sheen on the wa
ter.
"Mini m a 1 environmental
damage is expected to result to
the U.S. continental shelf from
the release of diesel oil, due to
the distance from shore,” the
Coast Guard said in u state
ment.
The floe broke loose from the
Soviet coast July 24, the Coast
Guard said. On Sept. 2, it was
reported drifting in the Arctic
Ocean 55 miles northwest of
Barrow, the state’s northern
most city
North Slope Borough and
federal officials were concerned
about pollution and the naviga
tion hazard posed by the ice
floe and any floating fuel
drums, particularly with the
start of tlie fall Eskimo whaling
season
Tho Coast iiuard said it
equippod ono of its ('-130
transports with a sensitive ra
dar system to help find the
drifting island, North Pole ill
That came after a half-dozen
attempts were made by the
Nortli Slope Borough Search
and Rescue Division to relocate
tiie ice floe.
North Slope and Coast Cuard
officials went to the station in
July, when it first was reported
to tie breaking away and when
tho 33 people working there
needed help getting off
A Soviet cutter rescued the
workers, and that was tho last
time the station's location was
known until the Sept 2 sight
ing by a walrus researcher.
Tho Soviets hud left 500
drums of diesel fuel, 30 drums
of aluminum powder, 10 drums
of lubricating oil, four bugs of
caustic soda and 000 empty
drums ut the site, according to a
memo to the Coast Cuard from
tiie Soviet Marine Pollution
Control and Salvage Adminis
tration in St. Petersburg
Satellites indicate that the ice
floe is moving northwest, to
ward the Soviet Union, officials
said.
The Soviets have accepted
full responsibility for the sta
tion, and have said they will re
move what structures and
drums remained, the Coast
Guard said.
Such stations usually are
used for long-term study of ice,
currents, weather and sea floor
topography.
I
TIRED OF
STUDYING?
RELAX
WITH THE
OREGON
DAILY
EMERALD
LIQUITEX TUBE
ACRYLICS
327,
Off
O i
ah ccxo«s
- tet MHS
32%
13TI1& KINCAID
CANVAS
STRETCHER
BARS
NEW!
WINSOR 4 NEWTON
COTMAN
WATEACOIORPADS
■3*’ *2M
PRO ART
ACRYLIC
GESSO
If you want to meet
all your banking needs,
enroll at We serve U First
Interstate Bank of Oregon We
have a special package designed to
help students make it through those trying
college years- the StudentLme Account It has
all the products and services you need
Checking Account with no minimum
balance. Write up to 12 checks a month for one
low monthly fee And cash your personal
checks at First Interstate offices throughout the
West and around the country
Student Lin®
VISA Eligibility
Even if you have no credit
history, you may still qualify
for a student VISA so you can
better manage your expenses
Student Loans. If paying for school is a
concern we can help you with a student loan
Student loans allow you to borrow money for
college and not begin paying it back until after
you graduate
So for all your banking needs from a
checking account to a student loan graduate to
First Interstate Bank
First Interstate Bancard Oet cash from
your account at First Interstate s free Day &
Night Teller machines throughout First Inter
state Territory Or use CIRRUS Exchange or
VISA automated teller machines all across the
country (for a small fee)
O First
Interstate
Blink m
\\ e i the cMr.i mile h »i v< Hi
RIGHT ON
TARGET!
i Oregon Daily Em©rQld
CALL OUR AD DEPT: 346-3712