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Illegal settlements of workers in erodible canyons above the Tijuana River have long been a source of trash and sediment in Southern California's largest coastal estuary. New inter-agency and cross-border efforts to control erosion and collect and reduce trash are underway. Oscar Romo, watershed coordinator at the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve, is overseeing a project to construct errosion prevention infrastructure using local labor and trash such as tires and glass bottles.

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20100817 021 PS.jpg
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Nathan Weyland 2010
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3000x2000 / 3.4MB
www.weylandphoto.com
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Illegal settlements of workers in erodible canyons above the Tijuana River have long been a source of trash and sediment in Southern California's largest coastal estuary.  New inter-agency and cross-border efforts to control erosion and collect and reduce trash are underway.  Oscar Romo, watershed coordinator at the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve, is overseeing a project to construct errosion prevention infrastructure using local labor and trash such as tires and glass bottles.