Shop Discovery Banner Image
skip to main content
 

Computers See Oil Spreading Far and Fast

Analysis by John D. Cox
Thu Jun 3, 2010 02:48 PM ET
( ) Comments | Leave a Comment

As early as this summer, oil spewing from the floor of the Gulf of Mexico is likely to get caught up in the  Gulf Loop Current and flow thousands of miles around Florida and up the East Coast, scientists warned Thursday.



The warning came from investigators at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado who put their powerful computer models to the task of simulating how a liquid released from the Deepwater Horizon spill site at different depths is likely to disperse over the next weeks and months.

Last week, Adminstrator Jane Lubchenko of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration observed that the first oil that became entrained in the current that loops around the Gulf before flowing out to the Atlantic as part of the Gulf Stream had become part of an eddy that cut off from the current and remains in the Gulf.

However, Synte Peacock, a member of the NCAR research team, said the six simulations by the sophisticated computer models suggested that the potential for trouble from oil in the upper 65 feet of water could be far-flung -- and fast.

"Actually," she said in a statement released by NCAR, "our best knowledge says the scope of this environmental disaster is likely to reach far beyond Florida, with impacts that have yet to be understood."

(The simulation above shows that once oil reaches the fast-flowing Loop Current, it could reach the Atlantic Coast of Florida in a matter of weeks and travel with the Gulf Stream as far north as Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, before turning east.)

NCAR emphasized that the simulations are not forecasts "because it is impossible to accurately predict the precise location of the oil weeks or months from now." Weather and ocean conditions that govern dispersal patterns -- including the Loop Current -- are too variable.

What happens to the oil in the Atlantic is the subject of more modeling work. German researcher Martin Visbeck, a member of the study team, noted that scientists have been asked about the potential impact along the coasts of Europe.

"Our assumption is that the enormous lateral mixing in the ocean together with the biological disintegration of the oil should reduce the pollution to levels below harmful concentrations," he said. "But we would like to have this backed up by numbers from some of the best ocean models."


Video:  National Center for Atmospheric Research

Tags: Meteorology, Natural Disasters, Oceanography, Pollution

comments ( )

Advertisement
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Advertisement
 
 

our sites

video

shop

stay connected

corporate