A city effort to clean up polluted Newtown Creek by aerating the water to boost oxygen levels is having an unintended effect: it is releasing sewage bacteria and other particles into the air above the site, researchers say in a new study in the journal Environmental Science and Technology. The researchers found bacteria types in the air consistent with the sewage and oil pollution in the creek. The study is one of the first to establish a link between water pollution and air-quality, raising new questions about the health risks posed by dirty water.
Pollution


| Name | Title | Fields of interest | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Andrew Juhl | Lamont Associate Research Professor | Plankton ecology, Phytoplankton growth and physiology, Zooplankton grazing, Harmful algae, Dinoflagellate blooms, Physical/biological interactions, Nutrient/microbial pollution of coastal waters, Sea-ice algae |

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September 10, 2012
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July 25, 2008
Ongoing Work By Scientists Will Supply Data to the PublicA frequently asked question around New York is: “Is it safe to swim? This has spurred Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory...

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Hudson River: A Swimmable Future? | Part of the 2011 Public Lecture Series |



