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London's Monstrous 'Fatberg' Now on Display in Museum

© AP Photo / Frank AugsteinThames Water field operation manager Natalie Stearn holds a piece of the Fatberg in an 1852-built sewer at Westminster in London, Monday, Sept. 25, 2017
Thames Water field operation manager Natalie Stearn holds a piece of the Fatberg in an 1852-built sewer at Westminster in London, Monday, Sept. 25, 2017 - Sputnik International
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The largest fatberg ever found lurking beneath the streets of London has been hauled out and put on display in a museum.

Discovered in September 2017, the Whitechapel sewer blockage became an international media sensation as one of the largest fatbergs ever found. The monster weighed 130 tonnes and was over 250 meters long — almost the length of Tower Bridge. It took a team of eight "flushers," working nine hours a day, seven days a week in hazardous conditions, more than two months to remove.

The toxic mass of congealed sewage, oil, hypodermic needles, wet wipes and sanitary products has long been on the Museum of London's wishlist. The exhibition dedicated to the story of the nine-week battle to remove the fatberg has finally opened to the public on Friday, displaying the last-remaining chunk that had first been air-dried and analyzed for safety reasons.

"Nobody has ever tried to preserve a fatberg before — they normally just take them out and destroy them." Vyki Sparkes, the curator of the exhibition, told reporters. "This is a live experiment basically. It's its own little microworld."

According to the Museum of London collection care manager Andy Holbrook, the object still had flies living in it five months after it was dismantled. From a distance, it may look like a space stone, but you realize that the reality is much uglier as soon as you come closer. What's also interesting about the fatberg is that it is still changing and crumbling while being on display.

​"It's dried out over three months. We have seen it change color from brown to more of an ivory color," Holbrook said, as cited by the New York Post.

According to the workers of the museum, they wanted to send a message to people that if they put fat, oil, grease, wet wipes down the toilet or down the sink, they are contributing to the creation of monster blockages in London's narrow Victorian sewers that could potentially flood the city and cost a lot of money to remove.

© Photo : Thames WaterThe Whitechapel Fatberg
The Whitechapel Fatberg - Sputnik International
The Whitechapel Fatberg

The rest of the fatberg was reportedly broken up and is now used as biofuel to power a London bus. The display will run until July 1.    

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