Scientists Confirm that Dispersants Are Increasing Contamination in the Gulf
Money and Finance

Scientists Confirm that Dispersants Are Increasing Contamination in the Gulf


From the naked capitalism blog.

Peter Hodson, an aquatic toxicologist from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, presented his case on 9 November at a meeting of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry in Portland, Oregon…

The problem, explains Hodson, is that the dispersed cloud of microscopic oil droplets allows the PAHs to contaminate a volume of water 100–1,000 times greater than if the oil were confined to a floating surface slick. This hugely increases the exposure of wildlife to the dispersed oil. …

Worse, the toxic constituents of oil hang around longer than other components, another speaker told the meeting. “This idea that there’s an oil biodegradation rate doesn’t hold,” says Ronald Atlas, a microbiologist at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, who has studied the aftermath of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska. Alkanes, the simple hydrocarbons that comprise the bulk of oil, are degraded more readily than the PAHs, he points out.





- Links
Merryn Somerset Webb interviews Hugh Hendry (Part 1) (LINK) Bob Rodriguez's speech to CFA Society of Reno [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK) Steve Keen: Launching Kingston University's Rethinking Economics group (video) (LINK) Related book: Debunking...

- The Facts Behind The Frack
If you have a Kindle, Science News is a great bi-weekly publication that can keep you up-to-date on the latest developments in the science world, automatically delivered to your Kindle for $2.25 per month. To call it a fractious debate is an understatement....

- How Animals Predict Earthquakes
Found via Naked Capitalism. Animals may sense chemical changes in groundwater that occur when an earthquake is about to strike. This, scientists say, could be the cause of bizarre earthquake-associated animal behaviour. Researchers began to investigate...

- John Mauldin: The Gulf Oil Spill Disaster
As I mentioned last Monday night in my Outside the Box, I did not make it to Turks and Caicos, but did end up in Baton Rouge for a special seminar on the Deepwater Horizon Gulf oil spill. I have both good news (or maybe more like less-bad news) and bad...

- The Economist: I Am Become Death, Destroyer Of Worlds
The story of how the dinosaurs disappeared is getting more and more complicated EVERYONE knows that the dinosaurs were exterminated when an asteroid hit what is now Mexico about 65m years ago. The crater is there. It is 180km (110 miles) in diameter....



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