http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/local-official-oil-just-started-bubbling-out-of-the-ground-thick-black-oil-that-did-not-appear-to-have-been-dispersed-video
Check the video kids, it's bizarre.
I don't buy the crab holes causing it either. It's to thick to have bubbled out that way, unless it was under pressure to do so.
I don't even want to say what I think it is because it's to scary to even think about.
On a Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana barrier island “oil oozes from a foot or two underground,” according a report by Fox 8 New Orleans.
P.J. Hahn, the Plaquemines Parish Coastal Zone Director the compared it to “Jed Clampet’s oil — All we need is the theme song to ‘The Beverly Hillbillies’… Oil just started bubbling out.”
When revisiting the island with the news crew, Hahn dug into the ground “turning up thick, black oil that had not been heavily weathered and did not appear to have been dispersed.”
“I would have never thought that this oil would be this deep underground,” Hahn said to Fox 8.
George Orwell once said: In a universe designed by deceit, The truth is an act of Revolution
Showing posts with label chemical dispersants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemical dispersants. Show all posts
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Scientists: Underwater plume of oil headed out to sea
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2010-05-15-gulf-oil-spill_N.htm
What will the consequences be this time as the penalty for another case of
"Hurry up and do something even if it's wrong"
Why does this situation remind me of the "Banking fix"
Possibly because, with money being used as a dispersant, it to has hid the toxic sludge from coming to the surface, but the problem is still there out of sight and it's volume grows.
In the first on-site measurements of the oil spreading below the surface, researchers found the plume of crude stretches 15 to 20 miles southwest from the site of the damaged wellhead and is about 5 miles wide, said Vernon Asper, a University of Southern Mississippi marine scientist leading the research.
The plume is compact, much thicker than the lighter remnants reaching the surface and suspended in about 3,000 feet of ocean, he said. A deepwater current is dragging it out to sea. The underwater oil cloud is not connected to the surface slick — now the size of Delaware and Rhode Island combined.
"This [underwater] plume is some of the heavier products of the oil that won't reach the surface," Asper said in a radio-telephone interview from aboard the R/V Pelican, a 116-foot research ship at the site of the spill. "We think this oil is going to stay down there. It doesn't look like it's coming to the surface."
The company has already dropped more than 560,000 gallons of dispersants on the surface slick and 28,700 gallons at the subsea wellhead, BP spokesman John Crabtree said.
The use of chemical dispersants at such depths has been controversial because it's never been used at such depths. Dispersants injected into the spewing wellhead is likely keeping the underwater plume suspended in 3,000 feet of water, said Mandy Joye, a marine sciences professor at the University of Georgia.
That keeps the oil from bubbling to the surface and potentially reaching fragile coastal marshes. But it's also creating a massive, toxic plume of oxygen-less oily water stretching through the deeper reaches of the Gulf of Mexico, Joye said.
The underwater plume, invisible to satellite imagery or aerial photographs, can also get stirred up and tossed into shallower waters if a hurricane passes over it, Joye said. The Atlantic hurricane season, which includes the Gulf, starts June 1.
"It is a good thing the oil is not damaging the coast line," Joye said. "But to say everything is fine because it's not hitting the coast is missing a very important part of this equation
What will the consequences be this time as the penalty for another case of
"Hurry up and do something even if it's wrong"
Why does this situation remind me of the "Banking fix"
Possibly because, with money being used as a dispersant, it to has hid the toxic sludge from coming to the surface, but the problem is still there out of sight and it's volume grows.
In the first on-site measurements of the oil spreading below the surface, researchers found the plume of crude stretches 15 to 20 miles southwest from the site of the damaged wellhead and is about 5 miles wide, said Vernon Asper, a University of Southern Mississippi marine scientist leading the research.
The plume is compact, much thicker than the lighter remnants reaching the surface and suspended in about 3,000 feet of ocean, he said. A deepwater current is dragging it out to sea. The underwater oil cloud is not connected to the surface slick — now the size of Delaware and Rhode Island combined.
"This [underwater] plume is some of the heavier products of the oil that won't reach the surface," Asper said in a radio-telephone interview from aboard the R/V Pelican, a 116-foot research ship at the site of the spill. "We think this oil is going to stay down there. It doesn't look like it's coming to the surface."
The company has already dropped more than 560,000 gallons of dispersants on the surface slick and 28,700 gallons at the subsea wellhead, BP spokesman John Crabtree said.
The use of chemical dispersants at such depths has been controversial because it's never been used at such depths. Dispersants injected into the spewing wellhead is likely keeping the underwater plume suspended in 3,000 feet of water, said Mandy Joye, a marine sciences professor at the University of Georgia.
That keeps the oil from bubbling to the surface and potentially reaching fragile coastal marshes. But it's also creating a massive, toxic plume of oxygen-less oily water stretching through the deeper reaches of the Gulf of Mexico, Joye said.
The underwater plume, invisible to satellite imagery or aerial photographs, can also get stirred up and tossed into shallower waters if a hurricane passes over it, Joye said. The Atlantic hurricane season, which includes the Gulf, starts June 1.
"It is a good thing the oil is not damaging the coast line," Joye said. "But to say everything is fine because it's not hitting the coast is missing a very important part of this equation
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
US oil spill: fishermen raise alarm over chemical dispersants
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/7705333/US-oil-spill-fishermen-raise-alarm-over-chemical-dispersants.html
How much does it scare you that a trade secret is being dumped into the Gulf and we're not allowed to know just exactly what that trade secret is made of or how much damage it in itself will do to the oceanic enviroment?
The killer part is that the leaks still leak on, but don't worry they still have anothe 500,000 gallons of the trade secret to dump on it while it does.
However, LuAnn White, a toxicologist at Tulane University, noted that what is being used now "is a new generation of dispersants, but we don't know what is in them because it's a trade secret.'"
Approximately 325,000 gallons of dispersant have been deployed so far in BP's effort to break up the spreading oil slick before it hits the fragile Gulf coast, and over 500,000 gallons more are available.
How much does it scare you that a trade secret is being dumped into the Gulf and we're not allowed to know just exactly what that trade secret is made of or how much damage it in itself will do to the oceanic enviroment?
The killer part is that the leaks still leak on, but don't worry they still have anothe 500,000 gallons of the trade secret to dump on it while it does.
However, LuAnn White, a toxicologist at Tulane University, noted that what is being used now "is a new generation of dispersants, but we don't know what is in them because it's a trade secret.'"
Approximately 325,000 gallons of dispersant have been deployed so far in BP's effort to break up the spreading oil slick before it hits the fragile Gulf coast, and over 500,000 gallons more are available.
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