Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

TEXT SIZE: A A A A
email this
print this
reprint or license this
Examples of World War I ordnance found on a beach in Surf City, Long Beach Island.
Army Corps of Engineers
Examples of World War I ordnance found on a beach in Surf City, Long Beach Island.
READER FEEDBACK
What's the scariest thing at the Shore?
Unexploded ordnance
The drive getting there
Jellyfish, bloodsucking flies, other wildlife
Losing one's shirt at the casinos
Beach tag fees
SAVE AND SHARE


More WWI munitions found on Jersey beach

Vistors might want to be careful planting that beach umbrella at the southern end of Surf City this summer.

Thirteen World War I-era artillery components - boosters and fuses that resemble rusty pipes - were found and removed from the Long Beach Island shoreline after last week's nor'easter, said Army Corps of Engineers spokesman Khaalid Walls.

The beach is open - it hasn't closed since more than 1,100 munitions were cleared by last Memorial Day weekend - and people can sunbathe and swim in a section with a lifeguard.

Digging and metal detectors are banned, though.

These munitions aren't like bombs or land mines that are designed to be easily triggered, Walls said.

"They have explosive materials inside them but they aren't independently ignited, like a bomb. They're components," he said.

"The potential exists for the items to explode, but we haven't had any incident," he said.

Still, beachgoers probably shouldn't jam that beach umbrella deeper than a foot, Walls said.

The metal-detector ban is to discourage people from hunting for souvenirs.

"We don't want people digging them up and putting them on eBay," Walls said.

Anyone who finds a suspicious object in the area should move away and caution others to do the same, then inform a lifeguard or call 911, Walls said.

The munitions, apparently dumped at sea by the U.S. Navy after World War I, wound up onshore after tons of sand were pumped to replenish the beach last year.

The section affected, about a mile long, extends into part of neighboring Ship Bottom as well.

The Army Corps will keep monitoring the situation.

"We're keeping a munitions expert at the beach all summer who's going to be doing daily scans, just to see if anything washes up from the surf," Walls said.


Contact staff writer Peter Mucha at 215-854-4342 or pmucha@phillynews.com.

  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Find a Car | Sell a Car | Research | Loans
Spotlight Deal

North Penn Imports Vw Mazda
(877) 762-8158
'05 Ford Explorer XLT
$14,990
'08 Subaru Legacy 25i
$18,995
'07 Pontiac G6 GT
$15,999
'06 Honda Element EX-P
$18,990
SEARCH CARS Used  New 
Spotlight Deal
Old City/Society Hill 19106
Spotlight Deal
Fox Chase 19111
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
Rittenhouse Square 19103
Spotlight Deal
Jenkintown 19046
SEARCH RENTALS
find an event
Mo
Oct 13
Tu
Oct 14
We
Oct 15
Th
Oct 16
Fr
Oct 17
Venue search: - by name
- by cuisine
- by venue type, e.g. "movie theater"
Location search:
- Philadelphia, PA
- 19101
- Center City
Venue search:
- by name
- by cuisine
- by venue type, e.g. "movie theater"
Location search:
- Philadelphia, PA
- 19101
- Center City
Date search:
Select which day you would like to search events, or select Search all days
Event search:
Type in the name of the event, or event type, e.g. 'live music'
SPORTS
Phil Sheridan: The last thing the Phillies wanted or needed was for this NLCS to get interesting. Guess what? It got there.
OBITUARIES
Michael Vilenchik, 70, of Chester, a medical researcher who studied the biological aspects of aging, died of cancer Sept. 24 at Einstein at Elkins Park Hospital.
Green
Living green the Smart Home way starts with a state-of-the-art - and artistic - dwelling that borrows from the past and courts the future, tracked by the structure's digital brain.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Philadelphia-based Sovereign Bancorp, which like many banks has been caught in the recent financial meltdown, was in "advanced talks" last night to sell itself to Banco Santander S.A. of Spain, which was already a part owner, according to published reports.
IT WAS A great night for baseball in Philadelphia, even when the baseball wasn't so great for the home team playing under a Pacific sunset 3,000 miles away.