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Purdue University engineering professor Steve Wereley, who at first was critical of federal efforts and then joined the government team, said he trusts the government work as more comprehensive than Columbia's. The federal government struggled mightily to calculate the spill's size at first and was sharply criticized for clinging to a too-low estimate for weeks. Ian MacDonald, a Florida State University oceanographer, said that by his count it took eight tries for the federal government finally to get its calculations right. Initially, federal officials adopted BP's estimate that 42,000 gallons a day was gushing out. They upped it to 210,000 gallons a day and stuck with that number for weeks. Then the government set up a special team of experts to estimate the spill size; that group came up with a range of estimates that was blasted by independent scientists as still too low. Finally in mid-June, about two months after the oil rig accident that caused the deepwater gusher, the federal government said the well could be leaking as much as 2.4 million gallons a day. And in August, following the shutdown of the spill the previous month, federal scientists estimated a total leak of 172.2 million. ___ Online: Science: http://www.scienceexpress.org/ Video of BP spill that Columbia used for the estimate:
http://www.earth.columbia.edu/videos/watch/259
[Associated
Press;
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