Aloha Pluto Friday!
Astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh discovered Pluto on February 18, 1930, at 
the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Percival Lowell was the 
first to propose that the planetary body that 
turned out to be Pluto existed. Wobbles in the orbits of Uranus and 
Neptune had been detected, and he thought they must be caused by the 
gravitational pull of an unknown planetary body. Lowell determined the 
approximate location of the body and tried to locate it for more than a 
decade, to no avail.  Tombaugh found Pluto 
while using a blink microscope combined with photographic plates. The discovery was publicly announced on March 13, on the anniversary of Lowell's birth and of the discovery of Uranus.  
Cargo-spilling ship leaves Northwest, returns to Asia. Its debris remains 
Nearly four months after spilling 109 shipping containers off the Washington and British Columbia coasts, the Zim Kingston
 left North American waters on Wednesday.
Oregon Dungeness crab season breaking records 
After starting on time for the first time in years, Oregon's Dungeness 
crab season is bringing in a record-breaking haul. Fishermen have 
brought in about $80 million this season, which began Dec. 1.
Scientists question state plan that doubles sewer bills at Puget Sound treatment plants 
Sewer bills could double by the end of the decade under a state plan 
that will require billions of dollars to construct new systems at 
wastewater treatment plants that discharge into Puget Sound. 
  
Plan for Snohomish River Watershed meant to tackle threats to salmon 'head on' 
Calling it the “Watershed Resilience Action Plan” for the Snohomish 
River Watershed, Washington state Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary 
Franz outlined a system of fixes to bring back salmon and other fish to 
the river on Tuesday. 
  
Court
 Rules on No Discharge Zone, Blocking Lingering Trump Administration 
Attempt to Allow Vessels to Dump Sewage into Puget Sound 
Late February 14, the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., denied a 
move by the American Waterways Operators and the previous Trump 
Administration U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to halt the 
implementation of a No Discharge Zone (NDZ) for Puget Sound in 
Washington state. 
Pacific Salmon Treaty failing to address harvest of B.C. stocks 
Significant numbers of salmon returning to spawn in British Columbia are
 being caught in southeast Alaskan fisheries, hindering Canada’s efforts
 to preserve and rebuild stocks that are declining to historic lows, 
B.C. salmon advocates say.
Study suggests climate change made B.C. floods twice as likely 
Catastrophic floods that swamped much of southern B.C. last fall were at
 least twice as likely because of climate change, suggests new research 
from Environment Canada. 
  
Washington researchers identify new tool in fight to contain invasive green crabs: eDNA 
State wildlife officials are requesting more than $8.5 million in 
emergency funding from the Legislature to boost the fight against 
invasive European green crabs.
      
Violence erupts at Coastal GasLink site near Houston, B.C. 
Very early Thursday, just after midnight, Coastal GasLink security 
called RCMP for help, reporting it was under attack by about 20 people, 
some wielding axes.
      
Mysterious bubbles in Puget Sound: UW researchers track hundreds of seeping gas plumes 
Data collected since 2011 shows 349 methane plumes in Puget Sound and 
Hood Canal. Researchers are exploring a potential correlation between 
the distribution of plumes and fault lines. Nicholas Turner reports.
      
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
        Salish Sea News and
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