Tar washes ashore in South Bay
Posted signs warn people not to make contact with ocean water in Manhattan Beach on May 28 as workers clean up a tar-like substance along the South Bay shoreline.
(Christina House / For the Los Angeles Times)Ariadne Reynolds, marine projects manager with the Bay Foundation, holds a sample of a tar-like substance collected from the water off the coast of Manhattan Beach on May 28.
(Christina House / For the Los Angeles Times)Ariadne Reynolds, marine projects manager with the Bay Foundation, collects a sample of a tar-like substance from the water off the coast of Manhattan Beach on May 28.
(Christina House / For the Los Angeles Times)Workers pick up tar-like substance in Manhattan Beach on May 28.
(Christina House / For the Los Angeles Times)Brad Fyffe of Manhattan Beach rakes up a clump of a tar-like substance as Ocean Blue workers clean up a two-mile stretch of shoreline north of the Manhattan Beach pier.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)Ocean Blue workers remove clumps of a tar-like substance from a two-mile stretch of shoreline north of the Manhattan Beach pier May 27.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)An Ocean Blue worker removes clumps of a tar-like substance from a two-mile stretch of shoreline north of the Manhattan Beach pier May 27.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)A gull looks down at clumps of a tar-like substance that washed ashore north of the Manhattan Beach pier.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)An emergency worker removes clumps of tar-like substance from the sand north of the Manhattan Beach Pier.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)