| Literature DB >> 23776444 |
Jacqueline Michel1, Edward H Owens, Scott Zengel, Andrew Graham, Zachary Nixon, Teresa Allard, William Holton, P Doug Reimer, Alain Lamarche, Mark White, Nicolle Rutherford, Carl Childs, Gary Mauseth, Greg Challenger, Elliott Taylor.
Abstract
The oil from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico was documented by shoreline assessment teams as stranding on 1,773 km of shoreline. Beaches comprised 50.8%, marshes 44.9%, and other shoreline types 4.3% of the oiled shoreline. Shoreline cleanup activities were authorized on 660 km, or 73.3% of oiled beaches and up to 71 km, or 8.9% of oiled marshes and associated habitats. One year after the spill began, oil remained on 847 km; two years later, oil remained on 687 km, though at much lesser degrees of oiling. For example, shorelines characterized as heavily oiled went from a maximum of 360 km, to 22.4 km one year later, and to 6.4 km two years later. Shoreline cleanup has been conducted to meet habitat-specific cleanup endpoints and will continue until all oiled shoreline segments meet endpoints. The entire shoreline cleanup program has been managed under the Shoreline Cleanup Assessment Technique (SCAT) Program, which is a systematic, objective, and inclusive process to collect data on shoreline oiling conditions and support decision making on appropriate cleanup methods and endpoints. It was a particularly valuable and effective process during such a complex spill.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23776444 PMCID: PMC3680451 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Representative photographs of shoreline oiling conditions.
Sand beaches: A. Small surface residue balls in the supratidal zone (scale is 15 cm); B. Buried oil patties; C. Surface residue balls in the intertidal zone that are angular, indicating that they were eroded from adjacent oil residue mats; D. Intertidal oil residue mats at the toe of the beach. Marshes: E. Heavily oiled wrack at the high-water line and oiled mat of laid-over vegetation; F. Thick (>1 cm) emulsified oil under the laid-over vegetation mats; G. Oil/shell incipient asphalt pavement on the marsh platform; H. Oiled Phragmites along the Mississippi River delta.
Oiled shoreline lengths (km) by oiling category at maximum oiling conditions, one year (May 2011), and two years (May 2012) post spill1.
| Length (km) | Total Surveyed | Heavy | Moderate | Light | Very Light | Trace (<1%) | Total Oiled | No Oil Observed |
|
| 7058 | 360 | 222 | 637 | 322 | 232 | 1,773 | 5,285 |
|
| 6967 | 22.4 | 56 | 178 | 131 | 459 | 847 | 6,120 |
|
| 7057 | 6.4 | 17.5 | 91.6 | 83.7 | 488 | 687 | 6,370 |
Values rounded to nearest whole km. when greater than 100 km.
Shoreline oiling along the Texas coast was surveyed only once and using a slightly different approach, with a reported 58 km of trace oiling.
Figure 2Oiled shoreline lengths (km) by oiling category and State.
A. At maximum oiling conditions, one year (May 2011), and two years (May 2012) post spill. B. Oiled shoreline lengths (km) by oiling category, State, and habitat at maximum oiling conditions.
Figure 3Maps by shoreline oiling category at maximum oiling conditions, one year (May 2011), and two years (May 2012) post spill.
Figure 4Time-series plots of the km of shoreline oiled by oiling category and habitat type.
Comparison of the lengths of shoreline oiled for systematic surveys.
| Spill Name/Date | Oil Type/Volume | Shoreline Area Oiled | ShorelineSurveyed (km) | ShorelineOiled (km) |
| T/V | Alaska North Slope crudeoil/260,000 barrels | Prince William Sound, Kenai Peninsula,and Kodiak Strait, Alaska | 5,459 | 2,100 |
| Gulf War oil spill February-May1991 | Kuwait crude oil/10,800,000barrels | Saudi Arabia shoreline of the westernArabian Gulf (limited but unknownarea oiled in Kuwait) | 772 | 707 |
| T/V | Intermediate fuel oil 180+ marine diesel/ 8,434 barrels | Western shoreline of Unalaska Island, Alaska | 763 | 418 |
| M/V | Intermediate fuel oil 380/1,380barrels | Central San Francisco Bay and outershorelines north and south of theGolden Gate, California | 379 | 147 |
|
| MC-252 Louisiana crudeoil/4,900,000 barrels | Northeastern Gulf of Mexico | 7,057 | 1,773 |