I sent a pic to my ex with the area of water everyone is questioning. (Pic related). His degree is water resources and he did environmental cleanup on military installations all over, including Puerto Rico, for decades. He does not follow Q and had never seen any of the pics before. Here's his thoughts for y'all to chew on. He said what you're seeing cannot be copper based on other pics he looked at. He also did not know about any fires on the island prior this. Kinda creepy how well his quick thoughts on this fit.
(He also went on after this talking about the layers of rock on the island and how it can't be copper, but he's got brain injuries and it's pretty confusing. I can post that if anons are interested. It's about volcanic ash layering from an underground volcano. Remember he worked on Puerto Rico for several years so knows the islands around there well.)
"Well first off... A MAJOR cleanup is going on. The buildings are all sealed with thick polycarbonate plastic as is the whole parking lot, roads and the shipping ramp.
So it's easy to see the break in the earth dam almost center of the picture. It looks size wise to me a large vehicle or something lost control and broke the earth dam they had. With that maybe they never "fixed it" and left it like that. Then it looks like a major spill happened.
Looking at the center building, I can tell it caught fire. All I can think of is zinc phosphate at the moment. You can't use water suppression on this type of spill and fire. Phosphate is used in matches and they can. Use some zinc to add "very tiny" scratches in the match tip to allow oxygen get in to light it. Think of Tom Hanks movie, he worked for FedEx, and could not get the fire going... Not enough oxygen was present. The stick, after he threw it, cracked and volia he had fire.
So if a fire truck, or whoever, put a hose to the fire it causes the fire to float on the surface of the water and spread out even more. (You need suppression foam).
Look at the dark then to the lighter trail of material from the burnt building heading right to the breach in the earth dam. The water is dark along both sides of the earth dam. Probably a red tide type of algae. Then it's all bright heading out away from this little cove area. That's were chemical reaction took place - from an acitic body of water breaking the zinc phosphate into a zinc chloride and depositing it there.
Now the phosphate turns into phosphite. In "clean" water, plants use phosphite in the soils to grow (as does algae). When a plant dies it has a lot of phosphate in it. As it falls to the bottom and decays it turns back into phosphite. It's cycling events.
Dealing with the hazmat, materials left behind a negative pressure on the clean up sites/areas needs to be made. Only freash air can come in. The result is the air gets sucked out and treated.
Looking at this, all I can think of is based on what I can see. Why would they have a storehouse of that zinc phosphate so close to water I have no idea. But it's only a guess. There are other compounds that can do this as well, but I can't think of any off the top of my head that can do that to water and also require negative pressure cleanups. (My old boss helped design the negative pressure structure over the entire post-office in DC that was exposed to anthrax, if you remember).
Ok so you light a match. What happens? Huge flare up and then calms down right? That's the zinc phosphate at the tip of the match. Burns hot and fast. So they could have used it cutting in roads and pathways on the island (getting rid of vegetation almost permanently.) Also use it in an incinerator to burn off all of the trash and garbage on the island.
Or gruesome as it sounds (body's to ash)."
Sorry if any of this is confusing. His brain doesn't always let him make complete thoughts together and it jumps them around. I tried to fix it up best as I could with zero understanding of all this. I can forward any questions you may have to him and reply back with his answers, if they're not too jumbled. Happy digging!