Back to Search Start Over

Character and sedimentation of 'lingering' Macondo oil to the deep-sea after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill

Authors :
Uta Passow
Scott A. Stout
Source :
Marine Chemistry. 218:103733
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

During the active 87-day Deepwater Horizon spill in the northern Gulf of Mexico, a significant fraction of the spilled Macondo oil was transported to the seafloor via the sedimentation of marine snow. Here we present a detailed characterization of oil that arrived together with marine snow at a 1400 m deep sediment trap six weeks to 13 months after the spill had ended. These data give insight into the nature and evolution of the sedimentation of the marine snow and oil, the latter of which remained as droplets in the water column after the spill ended. Four pulses of oil flux were recognized; three of which were associated with peak sedimentation rates of diatoms. Detailed chemical analysis (TPH, alkylated PAH, and petroleum biomarker fingerprints) reveal the sinking oil's lack of evaporation and photo-oxidation, which indicated it was not derived from the sea surface but had “lingered” within the water column after the spill. Measurable amounts of the increasingly weathered (biodegraded and water-washed) Macondo oil was collected in the trap for ~1 year after the active spill ended, over which time the oil flux decreased overall. The results indicate that sinking diatom aggregates and other marine snow scavenged measurable amounts of weathered Macondo oil droplets remaining in the water, and carried them to the deep-seafloor for approximately 1-year after the spill ended.

Details

ISSN :
03044203
Volume :
218
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........37064cfb074b7a8a9cac49f6f2bdc92f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2019.103733