Hiroshima Friday
On August 6, 1945, at 2:45 a.m., the Enola Gay, a B-29 bomber, 
took off from Tinian Island in the Mariana Islands. It was flown by Lt. 
Col. Paul W. Tibbets—who had named the plane after his mother—and 
carried an atomic bomb called "Little Boy." At 8:16 a.m., the bomb was 
dropped over the city of Hiroshima. It exploded at an altitude of 1,900 
feet, above a hospital. It released the equivalent of 12,500 tons of TNT
 and destroyed over four square miles of the city, leveling about 62,000
 of Hiroshima's 90,000 buildings. Around 80,000 to 90,000 people were 
killed on impact, and another 60,000 died by the end of the year on 
account of radiation sickness and other injuries sustained from the 
blast.
    DFO report suggests alternatives to open-net salmon farms in B.C. 
B.C. wild salmon advocates are calling on the federal government to 
expedite the transition away from open-net pen salmon farming, following
 a federal government report that outlined suggestions from 
stakeholders. 
Southern resident orca near Washington state presumed dead 
An orca is presumed dead after being found in distress last week in the 
Strait of Juan de Fuca, a body of water that separates Washington state 
from Canada, officials said. 
Critical Habitat for Southern Resident Killer Whales  
NOAA Fisheries has revised the critical habitat designation for Southern
 Resident killer whales. 
Washington tribe calls on Seattle City Light to remove the Gorge Dam 
To help salmon and free a culturally important stretch of the Skagit 
River, the Upper Skagit tribe demands that Seattle tear down the dam. 
      
To Save A Huge, 24-Armed Sea Creature, Scientists Become Loving Foster Parents 
On an island off the coast of Washington state, scientists have resorted
 to breeding sunflower sea stars in a lab. 
    
    Fine particulate air pollution associated with higher risk of dementia 
Using data from two large, long-running study projects in the Puget 
Sound region — one that began in the late 1970s measuring air pollution 
and another on risk factors for dementia that began in 1994 — University
 of Washington researchers identified a link between air pollution and 
dementia. 
  
The Greenland ice sheet experienced a massive melting event last week 
Last week, a heat wave spurred Greenland’s biggest melting event of the 
2021 season so far. The Polar Portal, run by Danish research 
institutions, stated that enough water melted to cover all of Florida 
with two inches of water. 
      
BC’s Shellfish Farmers Struggle After Heat Wave Decimates Oysters 
The heat dome exposed significant gaps in crop support, says an industry advocate.
      
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
        Salish Sea News and
          Weather which is compiled as a community service by Mike
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