Science
Related: About this forumMore Than Three Years Later, Oil From the Deepwater Horizon Persists in the Gulf
Its now been more than three and a half years since the Deepwater Horizon oil drilling rig leased to BP exploded, causing over 200 million gallons of crude oil to spill into the Gulf of Mexico, the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history.
In terms of the national news cycle, that duration might seem like a lifetime. In terms of an ecosystem as enormous and complex as the Gulf, its more like a blink of an eye.
Oil doesnt go away for a very long time, says Dana Wetzel, a biochemist at Mote Marine Laboratory in Florida whos been sampling water, sediments and the tissues of animals living in the Gulf for evidence of persisting oil. The assumption had been that in a higher temperature environment, bacteria are going to degrade things much more rapidly, and itll degrade quicker. But in previous research, shes found that even in warm environments, oil residue persists much longer than experts previously thoughtin the waters of Tampa Bay, for instance, she found oil a full eight years after a spill.
If you simply dunked a bucket into Gulf waters and tested for petroleum, she notes, you might not find any. But as part of an ongoing project, Mote researchers are employing innovative sampling mechanisms that use pieces of dialysis tubing, which trap oil residue much like a marine organisms tissue does as it filters water. Deployed in metal containers, the pieces tubing gradually filter water over time, collecting any contaminants present.
This oil can persist through a few different mechanisms. After coating sediments, the viscous substance can stick to them for years. Theres also evidence that some oil was trapped in the sunken Deepwater Horizon rig itself and continues to slowly bubble upward, accounting for the visible sheens of oil occasionally seen on the waters surface.
Read more: http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/science/2013/12/more-than-three-years-later-oil-from-the-deepwater-horizon-persists-in-the-gulf/
kdmorris
(5,649 posts)After all, all the oil just disappeared right afterwards. I know cause I heard it on the TV.