Includes data on underwater hydrocarbon plume, dispersants
NOAA announced the release of a
comprehensive, quality-controlled dataset that gives ready access to
millions of chemical analyses and other data on the massive Deepwater
Horizon Oil Spill. The dataset, collected to support oil removal
activities and assess the presence of dispersants, wraps up a three year
process that began with the gathering of water samples and measurements
by ships in the Gulf of Mexico during and after the oil release in
2010.
NOAA was one of the principal agencies
responding to the Macondo well explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, and is
the official ocean data archivist for the federal government. While
earlier versions of the data were made available during and shortly
after the response, it took three years for NOAA employees and
contractors to painstakingly catalog each piece of data into this final
form.
This Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill dataset,
including more than two million chemical analyses of sediment, tissue,
water, and oil, as well as toxicity testing results and related
documentation, is available to the public online at: http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/deepwaterhorizon/specialcollections.html.
A companion dataset, including ocean
temperature and salinity data, currents, preliminary chemical results
and other properties collected and made available during the response
can be found at: http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/deepwaterhorizon/insitu.html.
The Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill response
involved the collection of an enormous dataset. The underwater plume of
hydrocarbon -- a chemical compound that consists only of the elements
carbon and hydrogen -- was a unique feature of the spill, resulting from
a combination of high-pressure discharge from the well near the
seafloor and the underwater application of chemical dispersant to break
up the oil.
“The size and scope of this project -- the
sheer number of ships and platforms collecting data, and the broad range
of data types -- was a real challenge. In the end, it was a great
example of what can be accomplished when you bring together the
expertise across NOAA, making this quality-controlled information easily
available to the general public for the first time,” said Margarita
Gregg, Ph. D., director of the National Oceanographic Data Center, which
is part of NOAA's Satellite and Information Service.
The effort to detect and track the plume
was given to the Deepwater Horizon Response Subsurface Monitoring Unit
(SMU), led by NOAA’s Office of Response and Restoration, and included
responders from many federal and state agencies and British Petroleum
(BP). Between May and November 2010, the SMU coordinated data collection
from 24 ships on 129 cruises.
The SMU data archived at NOAA’s National
Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) is already being used by researchers at
NOAA and in academia for a range of studies, including models of oil
plume movement and investigations of subsurface oxygen anomalies. In
addition to NODC, other parts of the NOAA archive system such as NOAA’s
National Geophysical Data Center and the NOAA Central Library contain
important holdings. Recently, the library‘s Deepwater Horizon
Centralized Repository won recognition from the Department of Justice
“as one of the best successes in the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
world last year.”
By law, these data will remain available
through NOAA’s archive systems for at least 75 years. Additional data
from the Deepwater Horizon/Macondo spill can be found at the NOAA oil
spill archive website: http://www.noaa.gov/deepwaterhorizon/ and data collected in the on-going Natural Resource Damages Assessment can be found at: http://www.gulfspillrestoration.noaa.gov/.
Post to be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/NOAA-Releases-Millions-of-Chemical-Analyses-from-Deepwater-Horizon-Oil-Spill-2013-09-12/
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