More

Exxon Valdez Oil Trapped By Gravel Beaches

MARY PEMBERTON   01/17/10 11:46 PM ET   AP

Exxon Valdez
Exxon Valdez Oil

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — An engineering professor has figured out why oil remains trapped along miles of gravel beaches more than 20 years after the Exxon Valdez tanker disaster in Prince William Sound.

An estimated 20,000 gallons of crude remain in Prince William Sound, even though oil remaining after the nearly 11-million-gallon spill had been expected to biodegrade and wash away within a few years.

The problem: The gravelly beaches of Prince William Sound are trapping the oil between two layers of rock, with larger rocks on top and finer gravel underneath, according to Michel C. Boufadel, chairman of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Temple University. His study appeared Sunday in Nature Geoscience's online publication and will be published in the journal later.

Boufadel found that water, which could have broken up and dissipated the oil, moved through the lower level of gravel up to 1,000 times slower than the top level.

Once the oil entered the lower level, conditions were right to keep it there, he said. Tidal forces worked to compact the finer-grained gravel even more, creating a nearly oxygen-free environment with low nutrient levels that slowed the ability of the oil to biodegrade.

"The oil could be maybe one foot below the beach surface and in contact with sea water with a lot of oxygen, but the oxygen doesn't get to it," Boufadel said.

He found that the upper layer of beach is so permeable that the water table falls within it as fast as the tide. However, the permeability of the lower level is so low that the water table does not drop much within it, he said.

Boufadel said the study points out the susceptibility of beaches worldwide to long-term oil contamination, especially at higher latitudes where beaches tend to be gravel or a mixture of sand and gravel.

"As global warming is melting the ice cover and exposing the Arctic to oil exploitation and shipping through sea routes such as the Northwest Passage, the risk of oil spills on gravel beaches in high-latitude regions will be increased," the study says.

Boufadel and his team dug about 70 pits between 3-feet and 5-feet deep on six beaches during summers from 2007 to 2009. His report focuses on data collected on Eleanor Island, about 15 miles away from Bligh Reef where the Exxon Valdez grounded on March 24, 1989.

Peter Hagen, program manager for Exxon studies for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said Boufadel's study is a continuation of previous work that began in 2001 when 9,000 pits were dug around the sound, confirming the presence of oil.

While the remaining oil likely remains somewhat locked up in the beaches, the spill's lingering effects are ongoing, Hagen said. Sea otters, sea ducks and some sea birds are producing an enzyme showing exposure to oil.

Boufadel's study was funded by a $1.2 million, three-year grant from the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council. The council was formed after the environmental disaster to oversee restoration of the sound.

Boufadel doesn't know how long it might take for the remaining oil to finally disappear but predicted it will take a long time.

"It will be a slow process because the oil is relatively sheltered from water motion," he said.

___

On the Net:

http://www.nature.com/ngeo/index.html

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — An engineering professor has figured out why oil remains trapped along miles of gravel beaches more than 20 years after the Exxon Valdez tanker disaster in Prince William Sou...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — An engineering professor has figured out why oil remains trapped along miles of gravel beaches more than 20 years after the Exxon Valdez tanker disaster in Prince William Sou...
Filed by Adam J. Rose  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 44
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Merle Savage
06:42 PM on 01/20/2010
My name is Merle Savage; I was a general foreman on three different barges during the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (EVOS) beach cleanup in 1989. It was an exciting adventure with unusual environmental conditions and demanding situations -- but it turned into 20 years of extensive health deterioration.

In 2007 I learned how toxic the hot water beach spraying was from Dr. Riki Ott. She informed me that Exxon's medical records and reports that surfaced in litigation brought by sick workers in 1994, had been sealed from the public, making it impossible to hold Exxon responsible.

Exxon developed the toxic spraying; OSHA, the Coast Guard, and the state of Alaska authorized the procedure; and Veco and other Exxon contractors implemented it. Over 70 percent of the 11,000-plus work force was subjected to breathing in the toxic fumes 12-16 hours a day. Beach crews breathed in crude oil that splashed off the rocks and into the air; the exposure turned into chronic breathing conditions and central nervous system problems, along with many continuing massive health issues.

My website is devoted to searching for EVOS cleanup workers who have been exposed to the toxic spraying and are suffering from the same illnesses as me. Our summer employment turned into a death sentence for many -- and a life of unending medical conditions for the rest.

Video that exposes medical issues:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5632208859935499100
Stories and photos:
http://www.silenceinthesound.com/gallery.shtml
http://www.silenceinthesound.com/stories.shtml
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zootalors
roota, voota, zoot!
02:10 PM on 01/19/2010
and this is why i will NEVER buy exxon gas again
photo
MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
01:08 PM on 01/19/2010
About trapped petroleum persisting, lets recall the stuff we pump out of the ground had 'persisted' in its current state for about 100 million years. 450 BC Herodotus spoke of asphalt balls floating down the Euphrates past Babylon. This stuff is NEVER going away.

This isn't just about Exxon Valdez and Alaska. Its highly likely engineers wouldn't dare dredge your hometown river or bay for fear of disturbing 100 years worth of poisons in the sediment. God know what that fancy rennovated brick shopping mall was dumping into your local stream when it was a fatory back in 1888.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Organic-Guy
Organic Gardener, Carpenter, Philosopher, Agitator
11:42 PM on 01/18/2010
This had to be known as an outcome right from the start. any good geologist could have predicted this would happen and I suspect they did but some one shut them up. This is not a surprise.
08:08 PM on 01/18/2010
And after many years, a Professor at the University of Alaska who had been a majoy critic of the whole Exxon Valdez ordeal, had his NOAA grant stripped from him because of his outspoken opposition to offshore oil development in the Bristol Bay region:
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/10/22/university_of_alaska_scientist_rick_steiner
photo
mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
06:40 PM on 01/18/2010
And Exxon isn't "making it whole" by cleaning up their mess. And they spent decades avoiding paying their fair share.

Corporations have taken over our country. They've bought Congress through lobbying and campaign donations. They throw money at elections to see to it that their corporate friendly candidates will get elected, thus keeping regulations low or non-existent.

Our right wing Supreme Court members have declared corporations to be persons, but only when it benefits them. They're the ones that let Exxon off the hook.

Free market has become free rein to abuse the people of the country. Free market profits with socialized risk. They took our tax dollars for bailouts but failed to provide loans so homeowners could avoid foreclosure. They wrote our laws for credit card regulations, bankruptcy and medicare. If they can't write and control healthcare, they'll kill any movement to provide it to the people they've already cheated out of insurance.

And the people of Massachusetts want to elect a teabagging Republican?

Thanks but no thanks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joeamerican3
04:21 PM on 01/18/2010
Exxon claimed that the oil would bio-degrade in a few years, LOL, my how this is laughable!!!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
03:46 PM on 01/18/2010
We need to turn it over to Canada and their gravel sands technology.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realpolitic
GOP is full of sound and fury, signifying nothing!
01:32 PM on 01/18/2010
"As global warming is melting the ice cover and exposing the Arctic to oil exploitation and shipping through sea routes such as the Northwest Passage, the risk of oil spills on gravel beaches in high-latitude regions will be increased," the study says.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:08 PM on 01/18/2010
Exxon, to big to pay
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
housecalls50
Evolution will end the far right!
11:43 AM on 01/18/2010
My one person crusade to never purchase a dimes worth of fuel at Exxon/Mobil is ineffective as a crusade other than on a personal level but I am always astonished at how many people still put cash into their coffers after the mess they let lay in Prince Williams Sound. They added insult to injury in fighting any attempts to make them pay for the cleanup and the cost of damages to the eco-system there.
When I see drivers go to an Exxon station and pay as much as .08 to.10 cents more a gallon for fuel than a competitor just 3 to 4 blocks away, I know that name recognition (brain-washing) is well in force as well as a lack of concern about our planet. It's infuriating and outrageous!!
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Angie Cordeiro
We do all things with Grace which empowers us.
12:34 PM on 01/18/2010
x2

Add to that those whose stock portfolios, 401k's, etc. list XOM as a holding should be ashamed.
04:36 PM on 01/18/2010
Co-sign. My family doesn't by Exxon - ever. My dad would sooner run out of gas and call for my mom to bring him a can of fuel than to give $ to Exxon. He actually has done this before. More than once. I've been in the car with him when we were nearly on empty. He starts looking for a gas station. He sees Exxon, and says "There'll be another one in a minute." We spent 1 1/2 hours waiting on my mother to bring a can of gas once, rather than walking five minutes to get gas from an Exxon station. Mom's even more rabid than Dad.
06:48 PM on 01/18/2010
Absolutely. As soon as I finish college (went back last year) and go back to work, I'm def buying my own place and using solar panels. No more rinkydink apartment! Yay!
11:41 AM on 01/18/2010
id like to see a real picture of the beach on this article rather than the one provided
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
katocat
Dept. of Mousing & Purrin' Development
02:25 PM on 01/18/2010
I've seen the real thing.
11:24 AM on 01/18/2010
If the oil is "trapped" under the gravel beaches, then what's the point of this article. If the oil is trapped, it's not pollution.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:10 PM on 01/18/2010
Tell that to the wildlife.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabinetmaniac
"Without a struggle, there can be no progress. "
01:28 PM on 01/18/2010
Am I missing the sarcasm?

:-]
11:07 AM on 01/18/2010
http://www.buzzardsbay.org/oilspill-4-28-03.htm

http://leisureshorebeachrestoration.com/default.aspx

On Sunday April 27, 2003, the Tank Barge Bouchard No. 120 struck rocks south of Westport, MA, when it passed on the wrong side of a navigational marker at the entrance of Buzzards Bay. The resulting 12-foot gash on the bottom of the hull released an estimated 98,000 Number 6 fuel oil in Buzzards Bay. The vessel was on route to deliver oil at the Mirant electricity generation facility located on the Cape Cod Canal.

A large fraction of the released oil washed ashore in Dartmouth the next day, but because of shifting winds and rough seas in the days following the spill, oil continued to wash ashore for more than two weeks eventually landing on more than 90 miles of shoreline. The spill impacted a variety of natural resources, including wildlife (mostly birds, with 500 found dead), salt marshes, rocky shorelines, recreational beaches, and shellfish beds, which were closed for many months after the spill in some areas to protect human health.


Leisure Shores, also known as Howards Beach, was one of these areas most affected and oil is still being found.

Bouchard's clean up contractors failed to restore groins and beach to the condition they were in before the oil spill. As far as we know no one has showed us any kind of surveys that were done before the clean up was started, hence, original grades were never restored.
photo
mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
06:44 PM on 01/18/2010
And teabagging Republicans still shout "Drill baby Drill" and want to drill off of all of our beaches.

Gee, I don't think so.

We need to get rid of the tankers too. Enough with moving oil around. We need to learn to live with what we've got and stop shipping it all over.
06:44 AM on 01/19/2010
Is this the Buzzard bay to which you refer?

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://pics4.city-data.com/cpicv/vfiles6251.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.city-data.com/picfilesv/picv6251.php&usg=__HZfGMqx41d1T7b3Zsh2Zox8Jlgo=&h=768&w=1024&sz=272&hl=en&start=3&um=1&tbnid=ecARvJMremmAPM:&tbnh=113&tbnw=150&prev=/images%3Fq%3DBuzzards%2BBay%2BMa%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Doff%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26sa%3DN%26um%3D1

The date on the photo is 18 months after the spill. Clearly restoration was well under way.

So now what was your point?

And before you erupt into name-calling, I recycle, conserve and love this Plant Earth. I just hate twisted facts.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
TimtheEnchanted
My micro-bio is empty on purpose
10:24 AM on 01/18/2010
I haven't been to an Exxon station in 20 years, when they merged with Mobil, I stopped going to that station. It's obvious my personal boycott nas had no effect on Exxon/Mobil but if I can do it, I would think millions of others could if they thought it important enough.