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A dolphin
comes up for air after getting stuck in a section of the Gowanus
Canal on
January 25, 2013 in New York City (Getty Images/AFP, Michael Heiman)
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NEW YORK —
A dolphin that lost its way and got stuck in one of New York City's most
polluted waterways died, witnesses and local media said.
The
dolphin, a common sight in the Atlantic Ocean off New York, was spotted in the
Gowanus Canal, a notoriously hazardous stretch of water in Brooklyn, earlier
Friday. Local TV footage showed the mammal rising to breathe, then dipping back
down into the grey waters of the canal.
By
nightfall, the animal was clearly in trouble, then quickly died, NY1 and CBS
television reported.
"Myself
& an ecologist were there at the moment the dolphin died. He cried out.
Lifeless breached on concrete piling. Police put up tape," tweeted witness
Aaron Stewart-Ahn.
The US
Environmental Protection Agency calls the Gowanus Canal "one of the
nation's most extensively contaminated water bodies," and cites coal tar,
heavy metals and the results of "years of discharges, storm water runoff,
sewer outflows and industrial pollutants."
The canal
was named a Superfund site in 2010, meaning that federal funds will be
available for a cleanup.
In
December, a large whale was discovered washed up on a New York beach, still
alive, but fatally ill.

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