President Donald Trump’s more than $14 million Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool renovation was completed just over a week ago, with its more than 300,000 square feet refilled with 6.5 million gallons ...
Trying to kill algae with chemicals is a common response when community ponds or other water features go green, but a ...
Iron and hydrogen peroxide trigger cell death via ferroptosis, which cascades killer molecules through the population, ...
The Washington Monument is once again visible in the refilled pool, but Trump's vision of an azure expanse between the D.C. landmarks has been complicated by the harsh realities of chemistry and ...
The National Park Service is deploying hydrogen peroxide in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool to combat algae growth, according to a Department of the Interior (DOI) spokesperson. This effort ...
The water in Washington DC's Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool has turned green, and National Park Service officials are turning to drastic measures.
Gallon jugs of hydrogen peroxide were dumped into the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. But will that fix the green algae? Here's what we know.
As the Lincoln Reflecting Pool turned green with algae, officials are now using chemicals to fix it.
Warm weather has fueled a bloom that National Park Service workers are trying to kill using everything from hydrogen peroxide to nanobubbles ahead of July 4 celebrations.
The shallow, sunny waters of the reflecting pool are an ideal incubator for algae growth in the summertime. Experts say the recent renovation may have helped accelerate it.
A young woman sits on a wooden deck and dangles her legs into a green, algae-filled swimming pool in a backyard. - Alyssum/Getty Images Algae is an unfortunate possibility when it comes to pools, and ...
The paint began peeling off the bottom of the reflecting pool just days after renovations. Hydrogen peroxide used to treat ...