A shrimp boat out of Venice, Louisiana heads in after a day of skimming for oil instead of shrimping as part of the large effort to keep oil out of Louisiana's marsh and fragile eco system, oil continues to gush from the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana, USA, 27 June 2010. The Deepwater Horizon spill continues to spread impacting fishermen and tourist revenues along the Louisiana to Alabama coasts. EPA/BEVIL KNAPP
Louisiana's State Bird the Brown Pelican is one of the many birds at risk due to oil in their water, food and nesting areas marsh as oil continues to gush from the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico, Cat Island, Louisiana, USA, 27 June 2010. The Deepwater Horizon spill continues to spread impacting fishermen and tourist revenues along the Louisiana to Alabama coasts. EPA/BEVIL KNAPP
Black Hawk helicopters drop sand bags in Skip Jack Bay in an effort to keep oil out of Louisiana's marsh and fragile eco system, oil continues to gush from the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico, Skip Jack Bay, Louisiana, USA, 27 June 2010. The Deepwater Horizon spill continues to spread impacting fishermen and tourist revenues along the Louisiana to Alabama coasts. EPA/BEVIL KNAPP
The International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", sits on the banks of the Atchafalaya River in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Mr. Charlie, the first transportable, submersible drilling rig, drilled hundreds of offshore wells from 1954 to 1986 off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. EPA/BOB PEARSON COPYRIGHT2010epa The International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", sits on the banks of the Atchafalaya River in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Mr. Charlie, the first transportable, submersible drilling rig, drilled hundreds of offshore wells from 1954 to 1986 off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. EPA/BOB PEARSON COPYRIGHT2010
The International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", sits on the banks of the Atchafalaya River in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Mr. Charlie, the first transportable, submersible drilling rig, drilled hundreds of offshore wells from 1954 to 1986 off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. EPA/BOB PEARSONepa The International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", sits on the banks of the Atchafalaya River in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Mr. Charlie, the first transportable, submersible drilling rig, drilled hundreds of offshore wells from 1954 to 1986 off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. EPA/BOB PEARSON
A hardhat hangs on the emergency controls of the International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Unlike deep-water rigs which have emergency shut-off equipment underwater, Mr. Charlie, a shallow water rig, had its emergency system built into the rig above water. Mr. Charlie, the first transportable, submersible drilling rig, drilled hundreds of offshore wells from 1954 to 1986 off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. EPA/BOB PEARSONepa A hardhat hangs on the emergency controls of the International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Unlike deep-water rigs which have emergency shut-off equipment underwater, Mr. Charlie, a shallow water rig, had its emergency system built into the rig above water. Mr. Charlie, the first transportable, submersible drilling rig, drilled hundreds of offshore wells from 1954 to 1986 off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. EPA/BOB PEARSON
The oil derrick of the International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", on the banks of the Atchafalaya River in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Mr. Charlie, a shallow water oil rig, first drilled in 1954, drilled its last well in 1986 and is now a museum and training facility for oil workers. "Mr. Charlie" drilled hundreds of offshore wells off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. It was the first transportable, submersible drilling rig and was first used by the Shell Oil Company. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which began over two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/BOB PEARSONepa The oil derrick of the International Petrolium Museum and Exposition, also known as the "Mr. Charlie Rig", on the banks of the Atchafalaya River in Morgan City, LA, USA, 27 June, 2010. Mr. Charlie, a shallow water oil rig, first drilled in 1954, drilled its last well in 1986 and is now a museum and training facility for oil workers. "Mr. Charlie" drilled hundreds of offshore wells off the coast of Morgan City in the Gulf of Mexico. It was the first transportable, submersible drilling rig and was first used by the Shell Oil Company. The museum is now being used to train emergency and clean-up workers for the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which began over two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/BOB PEARSON
A US National Guardsman runs from a blackhawk helicopter after hooking sand bags to the aircraft at a base near Venice, Louisiana, USA, as workers continue to build protective barriers around fragile islands in Barataria Bay on 26 June, 2010. The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which began over two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/BOB PEARSON
People line up on the beach to protest offshore oil drilling durring 'Hands Across the Sand' at Pensacola Beach, Florida USA on 26 June 2010. The protest, according to event organizers counted around 500 people at Pensacola alone and is taking place in up to 900 cities in 30 different countries. The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which began two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/DAN ANDERSON
People line up on the beach to protest offshore oil drilling durring 'Hands Across the Sand' at Pensacola Beach, Florida USA on 26 June 2010. The protest, according to event organizers counted around 500 people at Pensacola alone and is taking place in up to 900 cities in 30 different countries. The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which began two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/DAN ANDERSON
People swim in the water as a oil skimming boat works in the background at Pensacola, Florida USA on 26 June 2010. Although much of the oil has been cleaned off the beach, clean up crews still work the shoreline looking for bits of oil. The BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which began two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/DAN ANDERSON
An US National Guard blackhawk helicopter flies with sand bags from a base near Venice, Louisiana, USA, in an attempt to protect islands in Barataria Bay on 26 June, 2010. Another blackhawk approaches in the background to pick up more bags. Contract workers and military continue to reinforce barriers around the fragile marshlands affected by the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The spill, which began over two months ago, is the largest in US history and continues to threaten wildlife, the ecosystem and the economy of the Gulf Coast as BP and government officials attempt to stop the flow and remove what has already been released. EPA/BOB PEARSON