What Is Molasses?

Blackstrap molasses drizzling from a spoon.
Blackstrap molasses is a dark, bittersweet syrup that is produced after the sucrose in molasses has crystallized.
(Image credit: Mona Makela | Shutterstock)

Thousands of fish have been reported dead in the waters around Honolulu after a massive spill of molasses.

On Monday (Sept. 9), a pipeline from a molasses tank near Honolulu Harbor was loading the heavy, sweet liquid onto a ship when a leak in the pipeline dumped hundreds of thousands of gallons of the sticky substance into the ocean. "It's sunk to the bottom of the harbor," Jeff Hull, a spokesman for Matson Inc., the company responsible for the leak, told the Los Angeles Times. "Unlike oil, which can be cleaned from the surface, molasses sinks."

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Marc Lallanilla
Live Science Contributor
Marc Lallanilla has been a science writer and health editor at About.com and a producer with ABCNews.com. His freelance writing has appeared in the Los Angeles Times and TheWeek.com. Marc has a Master's degree in environmental planning from the University of California, Berkeley, and an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas at Austin.