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About ten years ago, during the Deepwater Skyline oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, a computer

reenactment moved the noxious toxins farther than the docile PC TV tablet TV computer images
first displayed. did. These images were taken after an oil spill dumped about 800 million liters of oil
into the waters of the inlet and made a difference in quickly choosing where to close for fishing (SN :
4/3/15). A scientist's discovery (SN: 07/31/14) of the rationale that caused the oil to move further
away at this point. The latest assessment confirms this reality using computer simulations that
account for ocean currents, oil spills and major constituents to depict the exact extent of a spill.
According to University of Miami oceanographer Claire Paris-Limsey, the satellite missed at least 30
dangerous toxins. The study found vast areas of water where the concentration of oil was
dangerously too high.

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