Just as E. coli (Escherichia coli), a bacteria found in the intestinal tract of most living organisms (man, cattle, and the like), when kept where it belongs - deep within the intestinal walls and lining, it is harmless. But, when allowed to escape, as occurs when cattle are slaughtered and the intestinal contents intermix with the butchered meat that ends up on our dinner tables, the results are devastating, and most often, deathly.
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Oil spewing from crack in seafloor of Gulf of Mexico was fifty feet from Deepwater Horizon well
Monday, July 19, 2010
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Location of United States
After an investigation, Wikinews has learned that oil spewing from a rupture in the seafloor of the Gulf of Mexico on June 13 was 50 to 60 feet from the Deepwater Horizon leak.
A nearly four and a half minute video posted on YouTube on June 13 was from the Viking Poseidon ROV (Remote Operated Vehicle) 1. It shows oil and methane leaking from the seafloor at around 2:48 a.m. on June 13. The ROV monitors the leak for a minute and even gets covered in a plume of oil and sand before it moved on to the next spot. Smaller eruptions were seen as the ROV traveled, making the leak locations vary from 50 to 60 feet from the damaged well.
Until now, there was no way to determine the location of the ROVs in relation to the previously leaking Deepwater Horizon well. Alexander Higgins, an independent computer programmer, developed the 'Gulf Oil Spill ROV UTM Distance Calculator.' Using the coordinates for the location of the Deepwater Horizon, and the location of the Viking Poseidon on June 13, Wikinews was able to determine that the first rupture and leak was approximately 50.45 feet from the leaking well or "21.56 feet [n]orth and 45.61 feet [w]est" of the Deepwater leak point.
Higgins told Wikinews how he created the calculator, and says it is "very accurate," but that the tool would "not give you accurate measurements over a large distance, e.g. from the well head to New Orleans."
"This tool was created using java script that uses basic Pythagorean theorem () to calculate the distance between two points. The distance is simply . ROV coordinates match the location within a few feet when looking at the well because obviously the ROV can not be over the exact center because that is where the BOP is," said Higgins.
BP, who owned and operated the Deepwater Horizon, has denied that any oil or methane gas is leaking from the sea floor. On July 16, Kent Wells, the senior vice president of BP, said on their official Twitter page that "4 ROVs using sonar scanning [are] looking for anomalies in seabed floor. No indications any oil or gas escaping." Seismic tests were conducted on July 16; Admiral Thad Allen of the United States Coast Guard said that "no anomalies" were found, but also that the tests were "not comprehensive."
On Sunday, Wikinews contacted BP, who authenticated the video, and asked if any ROVs were sent back to the crack and leak location on June 13 for further investigation. According to their office in London, England, they "sent ROVs to investigate and monitor that and no further signs of oil or gas were found." They also stated that they "have continued to monitor" and "have also carried out seismic surveys. Nothing found to give concern." Wikinews also asked if they could confirm the location of the leak and crack, but no response was given.
However, on July 18, the Associated Press reported that there was "seepage" coming from the area at the bottom of the Deepwater well head. For the past two days, ROV cameras showed bubbles coming from the base of well. BP said it would test the bubbles to determine what they are and as of Sunday, COO of BP Doug Suttles says the bubbles are not methane, but further tests are being conducted. "If you can imagine, it is not an easy operation to collect those bubbles so that they can be tested to see what their make-up is."
Since the June 13 video surfaced, other videos have been posted to YouTube allegedly showing some of the ROVs being tossed around by large amounts of oil seeping through the seafloor. One video showed an alleged eruption spraying oil and debris around the BOA DEEP C 2 ROV before it was tossed from side to side. It then immediately retreated to the surface. Some of the cracks on ocean floors, where oil has leaked from, have occurred naturally. One such oil spill in California in 2005 was the result of a naturally occurring crack in the floor of the Pacific Ocean. Some of those cracks can cause oil to leak through at a rate as high as 5,000 gallons a day, with most of the oil not even reaching the water's surface. In the Gulf of Mexico, oil leaks through natural cracks at a rate several times less than leaked from the Deepwater well.
"The Deepwater Horizon site releases 3 to 12 times the oil per day compared to that released by natural seeps across the entire Gulf of Mexico. By May 30, the Deepwater Horizon site had released between 468,000 and 741,000 barrels of oil, compared to 60,000 to 150,000 barrels from natural seeps across the entire Gulf of Mexico over the same 39 day period," said Cutler Cleveland, a Boston University professor at the university's Department of Geography and Environment.
The Deepwater Horizon oil spill started on April 20 after an explosion on the rig. Efforts to put out the fire failed and the rig subsequently sank to the bottom of the Gulf. On April 22, an oil slick appeared on the surface of the Gulf. BP capped the leaking well on July 13 which effectively stopped oil from leaking into the Gulf. The company has been running a pressure integrity test on the 150,000 pound cap for 48 hours. Earlier on July 17, they announced the test would continue for another day. BP hopes for the well's pressure to rise to or above 7,500 PSI. As of Saturday morning the well's pressure was just above 6,700 PSI. BP fears anything lower than the expected PSI could mean a leak in the cap or elsewhere, such as oil or methane seeping up from the seafloor.
"We are feeling more comfortable we have integrity. We will keep monitoring and make the decisions as we go forward. The longer the test goes the more confidence we have in it," said Allen.
Related News
- "BP: New cap on Gulf of Mexico oil well in place" — Wikinews, July 15, 2010
Sources
- Colleen Long and Harry R. Weber - Associated Press. "Federal Official: Seep Found Near BP's Busted Oil Well" — AOL News, July 18, 2010
- Mark Schleifstein. "BP's Gulf oil well cap test could be extended past 3 p.m. today to better understand pressure readings" — The Times-Picayune, July 18, 2010
- Kristen Hays. "BP extends test of Gulf of Mexico oil well" — Reuters, July 17, 2010
- Jessica Durando. "BP's testing of Gulf oil well extended for 24 hours" — USA Today, July 17, 2010
- Alex higgins. "BP Gulf Oil Spill ROV UTM Distance Calculator" — alexanderhiggins.com, N/A
- Uploaded by: QuadResponse. "Boa Deep C - ROV 2 - Sea Bed Pop!" — YouTube, July 16, 2010
- Kent Wells. "BP official Twitter status: No leaking" — Twitter, July 16, 2010
- Thad Allen. "BP official Twitter status: Seismic Survey" — Twitter, July 16, 2010
- "New BP Cap Set For Slow Tests Of How It Holds Oil" — WKRG, July 13, 2010
- Uploaded by: Alex Higgins. "ROV films oil leak coming from rock cracks on seafloor" — YouTube, June 13, 2010
- Maggie Koerth-Baker. "Natural oil seeps: Not proof oil spill worries are overblown" — BoingBoing, June 9, 2010
- "Coast Guard: Oil rig that exploded has sunk" — CNN, April 22, 2010
- Christopher Reddy. "While Oil Gently Seeps from the Seafloor: Oil naturally leaking into the ocean offers a 'laboratory' to study accidential spills" — Coastal Ocean Institute, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, May 14, 2009
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