Dayton Daily News

Grimy biofilm is creeping over the Jefferson Memorial

Park Service looking for cleaner that will tackle it.

- By Michael E. Ruane

It’s black! WASHINGTON — It’s creepy! And it’s crawling over the Jefferson Memorial!

It’s biofilm — a microbial invasion of uncertain origin that has begrimed the stone surface of one of the nation’s most hallowed monuments.

Part algae, part bacteria, part fungi, the biofilm won’t eat your flesh, like the gooey Blob in the 1958 horror film, as a National Park Service spokesman remarked.

But it’s not clear if it’s munching on the stone. And it can’t be killed. It has given the elegant white memorial on Washington’s Tidal Basin a dingy look, and, Blob-like, it is growing.

It is especially pronounced on the memorial’s dome, around its base, and on the triangular pediment that portrays Jefferson and four colleagues who helped draft the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

Concerned citizens have offered to try to clean it off, and the Park Service is experiment­ing with several cleaning solutions to see what works best without harming the Vermont marble.

No damaging scrub brushes can be used, although some of the cleaning products leave a temporary orange tint. Officials have also discussed cleaning with lasers.

The film is also on the memorial amphitheat­er at Arlington National Cemetery, the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial, the Park Service said.

It was on the D.C. War Memorial on the Mall, Washington’s tribute to its World War I dead, before that monument was refurbishe­d in 2011. And it may be coming back there, too.

It’s somewhat akin to other biofilms, like dental plaque, the Park Service said. But what, exactly, is it? “We don’t even know the who, what, when, where, why,” said Judy Jacob, senior conservato­r with the Park Service’s Historic Architectu­re, Conservati­on, and Engineerin­g Center in New York.

“We’re just starting to understand what it is, and its relationsh­ip to stone,” she said.

“We can remove a good amount of it,” she said. “But it doesn’t mean we kill it. We can’t do that ... . And it doesn’t mean that it won’t come back.”

The film is actually a “multicultu­ral” community of organisms living in the relatively harsh environmen­t of the sun-blasted stone, said Federica Villa, a Milanbased microbiolo­gist who has been studying the memorial’s surface.

The black pigment is produced by the organisms to protect themselves from solar radiation, she said.

But does the biofilm damage stone?

“We don’t know,” Villa said. “If you read the scientific literature, most of the scientists correlate the presence of a biofilm with deteriorat­ion.”

But she said her experiment­s have shown that biofilm may have a protective impact on stone.

“To be honest, we have a lot of work to do,” she said.

The memorial was dedicated in 1943. The biofilm became noticeable less than a decade ago, the Park Service said.

The reason may be that air pollution, which can inhibit the growth of such organisms, has decreased, the Park Service said.

Or it may have something to do with the microclima­te near the memorial.

There’s a small weather station on top of the memorial, and data is collected monthly, said Catherine Dewey, chief of resource management for the National Mall and Memorial Parks.

“Because we have this huge body of water,” she said, referring to the Tidal Basin, “is that tiny little bit of extra humidity ... a factor?”

“We have some photograph­s from ... 2009 where there’s very, very little growth,” she said. “In 2012, you see a little bit more. In 2014, it’s even worse. It’s grown immensely over the last few years.”

On a recent day, Dewey was testing cleaning fluids on small strips at the base of the memorial’s east side.

“It’s particular­ly bad on this memorial, for whatever reason,” she said as she sponged on the fluids.

“It’s really deep into the stone, so it will take some time,” she said. “What we’re finding is it may not be clean immediatel­y. But give it six months, and it will be much lighter.”

Some repair work is planned for the memorial in 2018, and the grit on the dome could be addressed then, she said.

The 32,000-ton memorial, which honors the nation’s third president and main author of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, rests on 634 pilings and caissons sunk to the bedrock beneath the south side of the basin. During the annual Cherry Blossom Festival, it is a prime backdrop for photograph­ers.

Six years ago, a $12.4 million repair project shored up its poorly supported seawall, which had been sinking into the basin. And in 2014, a large chunk of limestone fell from the ceiling. The ceiling was stabilized, and netting was installed in case anything else came loose, Park Service spokesman Mike Litterst said. A full repair has not yet been done.

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