News -> INDReporter THU, MAY 27 2:13PM by The Independent Staff

Lurking threat: New giant plume discovered in Gulf

From the Associated Press:

Marine scientists have discovered a massive new plume of what they believe to be oil deep beneath the Gulf of Mexico, stretching 22 miles from the leaking wellhead northeast toward Mobile Bay, Ala.

The discovery by researchers on the University of South Florida College of Marine Science’s Weatherbird II vessel is the second significant undersea plume recorded since the Deepwater Horizon exploded on April 20.

David Hollander, associate professor of chemical oceanography at the school, says the thick plume was detected just beneath the surface down to about 3,300 feet. He says it’s more than 6 miles wide.

Scientists say they are worried the undersea plumes may be from chemical dispersants used to break up the oil a mile under the surface.

Walter Pierce
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written by EXISTENTIALIST HOMME , May 27, 2010 - 10:02 pm
Well the Chemical treatment of "the oil gushing from the BP well (as Quoted by BP stating the oil erupting from the well at "5000 BBLS/DAY) has now stretched to encompass miles of gulf waters, the chemical used by BP on the blowout is a disperant, and actually works to breakdown the buoyancy of the oil, and the oil which does not settle to the bottom is distributed along the gulf stream, in this case towards Mobile Bay, also the well is " NOT LEAKING,, as the BLOW-OUT IS CONSTANTLY BEING DESCRIBED ", the well has Blown-Out, one may be correct in guessing that the Blow-Out has infiltrated other upper level zones, or in "oil field terms"...Charged-Up subterraneous levels, if this is occurring then the scenario will become, absolutely bleak for us all.... The damage to wild life on the surface shall prove minute as compared to the subsurface damage to our marine life, marine life which is a major contribution to our subsistence.......It is evident from the volume of oil gushing from the blow-out as viewed by subsurface cameras that the amount as stated by BP of 5000 bbls/day falls short of the amount of oil spewing from the well, clearly it is more like 20,000-30,000 bbls/day
It is obvious the penality which will be imposed on BP will be relative to the size of the spill, and BP is downplaying the volume of oil contaminating our waters each day....But without acknowledgement by BP of the actual amount of oil leaving the well, the delay and lackadaiscal action by those responsible for the clean-up shall cause undue damages to the gulf waters from our Louisiana coast to the tip of Florida, and possibility to the lower east coast.......
Each day that goes by leaves us with untold amounts of oil which will not be reclaimed, and will continue to damage our environment for years to come.....and that is the " Size of the matter..........SHAME ON BP, AND THE OIL INDUSTRY, FOR AVOIDING THE ISSUE AT HAND !
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written by Jason D. Faulk , May 28, 2010 - 09:56 am
Thank you Homme.

The public doesn't yet understand the web of life from a biology view. It's a long time from that point of our grade school education to our adult working lives where such things aren't the daily bread and butter.

After this blow-out, they will begin to know the complex interactions and what producers, primary and secondary consumers and digesters are in the ecosystem. They will begin to see the connections hidden in the veil of the water column. Just the other day on network news, I saw a reminder of the Sargasso grass (what as a child, I always thought of as that funky sea-weed that washed up on the beaches.) That grass is all, an incubation and habitat niche for small shrimp and fish and other organisms, for which larger fish like menhaden consume. The menhaden (excluding the ones we catch for fish-meal factories on land and fish-oil supplement factories) are eaten by many birds and still larger carnivorous fish.

So right, toxins accumulate, or if the base stock is decimated, the higher ups move elsewhere or die off.

Luckily, we people have options, an endless supply of chickens from Farmerville and sweet potatoes cut into handisticks from Rayville.

This will still have it's effect. The complex food chain lends itself to nutrient cycling and animal population counts in the region and globally.

At any rate, just like every school boy in Lafourche can tell you about erosion and subsidence these days, most south Louisianians I believe will have an appreciation of what now appears to be a broad and deep brewing ecological crisis.

I'm holding my breath that mother nature can remediate much of this, and I believe it will be, but for our lifetimes, the state of affairs may remain impacted, diminishing the quality of life we enjoy by living in the midst of a region which has been one of bountiful natural treasures.

It's not always about what we can take, but that which we are blessed enough to receive.
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