Deep plumes of oil and methane could cause dead zones in the Gulf

19 August 2010

Joint Release

WASHINGTON—A new simulation of oil and methane leaked into the Gulf of Mexico suggests that deep hypoxic zones or “dead zones” could form near the source of the pollution. The research investigates five scenarios of oil and methane plumes at different depths and incorporates an estimated rate of flow from the Deepwater Horizon spill, which released oil and methane gas into the Gulf from April to mid July of this year.

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Courtesy of Chris Reddy, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

A scientific paper on the research has been accepted for publication by Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

Scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Princeton University conducted the research. Based on their simulations, they conclude that the ocean hypoxia or toxic concentrations of dissolved oil arising from the Deepwater Horizon blowout are likely to be “locally significant but regionally confined to the northern Gulf of Mexico.”

A hypoxic or “dead” zone is a region of ocean where oxygen levels have dropped too low to support most forms of life, typically because microbes consuming a glut of nutrients in the water use up the local oxygen as they consume the material.

“According to our simulations, these hypoxic areas will be peaking in October,” says study coauthor Robert Hallberg of the NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, N.J. “Oxygen drawdown will go away slowly, as the tainted water is mixed with Gulf waters that weren’t affected. We’re estimating a couple of years” before the dead zone has dissipated, he adds.

Although the Princeton-NOAA study was carried out when the flow rate from the Deepwater Horizon spill was still underestimated, the simulated leak lasted longer than did the actual spill. Consequently, says Alistair Adcroft of Princeton University and the NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, another study coauthor, “the overall impact on oxygen turns out to be about the same” as would be expected from the Deepwater Horizon spill.

Joint Release

AGU Contact:

Maria-José Viñas, +1 202 777 7530, [email protected]

Princeton Contact:

Kitta MacPherson, +1 (609) 258-5729, [email protected]


As of the date of this press release, the paper by Adcroft et al. is still “in press” (i.e. not yet published). Journalists and public information officers (PIOs) of educational and scientific institutions who have registered with AGU candownload a PDF copy of this paper in press.

Or, you may order a copy of the paper by emailing your request to Maria-José Viñas at [email protected] or to Kitta MacPherson at [email protected]. Please provide your name, the name of your publication, and your phone number.

Neither the paper nor this press release are under embargo.

Title

“Simulations of underwater plumes of dissolved oil in the Gulf of Mexico”

Robert Hallberg, NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Tel. +1 (609) 452- 6508, Email[email protected]

Alistair Adcroft, Princeton University and NOAA Geophysical Dynamic laboratory, Tel. +1 (609) 987-5073, [email protected]