Home » Autos & Vehicles » In the 70s, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, tried creating its own artificial coral reef by dumping some 2 million used tires into the ocean. It became an environmental disaster, naturally, but also a military training exercise when divers had to retrieve the tires (almost one by one).

In the 70s, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, tried creating its own artificial coral reef by dumping some 2 million used tires into the ocean. It became an environmental disaster, naturally, but also a military training exercise when divers had to retrieve the tires (almost one by one).

Fallout from Bad ’70s Idea: Auto Tires in Ocean Reef

It seemed like a good idea at the time. In the early 1970s, a group of fishermen organized a campaign to dump 2 million used auto tires into the Atlantic Ocean, about a mile off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., between two living coral reefs.

The goal was to build an artificial reef that would promote sea life. But it had the opposite effect: The mass of tires became an underwater blight.

William Nuckols, with Coastal America, the federal office that is helping coordinate a cleanup of the tires, says the original goal was a good one.

“The original intention,” Nuckols says, “was to try to provide a fish habitat and add to the natural coral reefs that were there.”

Broward County and the Army Corps of Engineers approved the … Continue Reading (3 minute read)

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