Photooxidation and biodegradation potential of a light crude oil in first-year sea ice

2021 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 112154
Author(s):  
Durell S. Desmond ◽  
Diana Saltymakova ◽  
Alastair Smith ◽  
Teresinha Wolfe ◽  
Nolan Snyder ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Sea Ice ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 1981 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
David F. Dickins ◽  
Ian A. Buist ◽  
William M. Pistruzak

ABSTRACT The main cleanup of an oil spill originating from a late-season oil well blowout in the Beaufort Sea would take place in the spring. It is at this time that the oil trapped in and under the ice would surface to accumulate in melt pools on top of the ice. To tie all the previous work on oil migration an in-situ burning together, Dome Petroleum Ltd. undertook a major oil spill experiment during the winter of 1979/80 in the Beaufort Sea. The objective of this field experiment was to determine the efficiency of burning as a countermeasure and to optimize burning techniques for oil and gas released from a Beaufort Sea blowout under ice. The experiment took place in three phases, approximately 8 kilometres offshore from McKinley Bay in the Beaufort Sea, in first-year ice. Approximately 19 cubic metres of crude oil was discharged under the ice in conjunction with gas (air). This oil surfaced in the spring in pools thick enough to burn. Some 80 percent of the oil discharged was removed from the marine environment.


2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 12677-12684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdulhafiz Usman ◽  
Abdullah Aitani ◽  
Sulaiman Al-Khattaf

2002 ◽  
Vol 48 (161) ◽  
pp. 177-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Louis Tison ◽  
Christian Haas ◽  
Marcia M. Gowing ◽  
Suzanne Sleewaegen ◽  
Alain Bernard

AbstractDuring an ice-tank experiment, samples were taken to study the processes of acquisition and alteration of the gas properties in young first-year sea ice during a complete growth–warming–cooling cycle. The goal was to obtain reference levels for total gas content and concentrations of atmospheric gases (O2, N2, CO2) in the absence of significant biological activity. The range of total gas-content values obtained (3.5–18 mL STP kg−1) was similar to previous measurements or estimates. However, major differences occurred between current and quiet basins, showing the role of the water dynamics at the ice–water interface in controlling bubble nucleation processes. Extremely high CO2concentrations were observed in all the experiments (up to 57% in volume parts). It is argued that these could have resulted from two unexpected biases in the experimental settings. Concentrations in bubbles nucleated at the interface are controlled by diffusion both from the ice–water interface towards the well-mixed reservoir and between the interface water and the bubble itself. This double kinetic effect results in a transition of the gas composition in the bubbles from values close to solubility in sea water toward values close to atmospheric, as the ice cover builds up.


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