The Tragic State of the Gulf of Mexico: Sampling Reveals Oil and Dispersants on Mississippi Coast

by: Dahr Jamail and Erika Blumenfeld, t r u t h o u t | Report

The Tragic State of the Gulf of Mexico: Sampling Reveals Oil and Dispersants on Mississippi Coast
Dead fish and oiled marsh grass, Blood Beach, Ocean Springs, Mississippi. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

In October 2010, Truthout tested several water and soil samples from the Gulf of Mexico for chemicals in BP's crude oil and toxic dispersants. One sample of dead marine life was also tested.

Truthout also obtained and had analyzed a sample of pure Corexit 9500, one of the toxic dispersants used to sink the crude oil. The dispersants BP has used in the Gulf of Mexico are banned in at least 19 other countries. BP has used at least 1.9 million gallons of the dispersants in the Gulf of Mexico to sink their 4.9 million barrels of crude oil.

The samples were tested in a private lab via gas chromatography by an analyst who requested anonymity.

Pass Christian Harbor at dusk. Photo: Erika Blumenfeld

Pass Christian Harbor at dusk. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

Lab tests have confirmed oil and chemicals from the dispersants in the samples tested, which contradicts ongoing statements from both BP and the Obama administration that the Gulf of Mexico is safe from the effects of the BP oil disaster.

Corexit 9500

Lab tests with Corexit 9500, oil, and saltwater.

Lab tests with Corexit 9500, oil, and saltwater. (Photo: Scientist who performed lab analysis)

These two vials were filled with saltwater and a small amount of motor oil. Two drops of Corexit 9500 were added to the vial on the left and both vials were gently shaken for 30 seconds. Both samples then sat for one hour before this picture was taken.

The milky color of the water in the vial on the left displays the manner in which the dispersant causes a portion of the oil to dissolve into the water. When crude oil in the Gulf is treated with dispersant, a large portion of the oil is also dissolved into the seawater, allowing harmful volatile contaminants to also dissolve into the water, which would have otherwise evaporated had the oil been sitting on the surface.

This theory is nothing new, but this picture displays this phenomenon visually. After nine days, there was still no sign of any separation between the dissolved oil and water at all. In fact, it currently appears that the effect has only increased over time.

The foam atop the vial containing the dispersed oil resembles foam that this writer, other journalists, BP cleanup workers and fishermen along the Gulf Coast have witnessed present in the wake of areas of oil having been sprayed with dispersants.

Many of the chemicals present in the oil and dispersants are known to cause headaches; nausea; vomiting; kidney damage; altered renal functions; irritation of the digestive tract; lung damage; burning pain in the nose and throat; coughing; pulmonary edema; cancer; lack of muscle coordination; dizziness; confusion; irritation of the skin, eyes, nose, and throat; difficulty breathing; delayed reaction time; memory difficulties; stomach discomfort; liver and kidney damage; unconsciousness; tiredness/lethargy; irritation of the upper respiratory tract; and hematological disorders.

Solid Samples

Mississippi Gov. Hailey Barbour has claimed that Mississippi coastal waters are clear, the beaches clean and that the seafood caught in the Gulf is safe to eat.

Yet, soil samples taken along the beach at Long Beach, Mississippi, on October 21, 2010, confirmed the presence of crude oil. One sand sample, from location 3012.45N, 8930.41W, contained 9.35 parts per million (ppm) of Oil Range Organic Petroleum Hydrocarbons (ORO), confirming the presence of crude oil. This sample also contained ethanol, which is a chemical in BP's dispersants.

Another sand sample taken from the same area contained 160 ppm ORO.

Samples with no oil or chemicals should test at 0 ppm.

Foamy substance at Long Beach, Mississippi that contains oil and ethylene glycol.

Foamy substance at Long Beach, Mississippi that contains oil and ethylene glycol. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

A third sample from the area, containing both sand and a brownish foam on the water that local residents and fishermen believe is the result of dispersed oil, contained 14.68 ppm ORO, confirming the presence of crude oil. This sample also contained ethylene glycol, a chemical in the dispersants.

The US Coast Guard, federal government and BP claim that no dispersants have been used since mid-July.

Black granular material at Long Beach, Mississippi that tested positive for crude oil.

Black granular material at Long Beach, Mississippi that tested positive for crude oil. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

Another sample from the area taken from sand covered in what local residents described as "coffee grounds" contained 8.65 ppm ORO, confirming the presence of crude oil.

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A small inlet on the beach was filled with brown foam and oil sheen. A sample of sand covered with the foamy sheen contained 175 ppm ORO.

Foamy substance along shoreline at Long Beach, Mississippi that tested positive for crude oil.

Foamy substance along shoreline at Long Beach, Mississippi that tested positive for crude oil. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

On January 7, federal and Louisiana officials took a boat tour of an area in southern Louisiana that remains fouled with oil from the BP disaster. They found areas in Barataria Bay where oil continued to eat away at the fragile marshland, where no protective boom nor cleanup workers could be found. Affected areas were up to 100 feet wide in some sections.

"This is the biggest cover-up in the history of America," Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser told reporters.

Nungesser was angered by claims by the Coast Guard and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) officials he was with, who said a plan was being developed to clean the area.

"It's like you're in bed with BP," Nungesser told the officials. "Don't tell me I got a voice in the way you put together that crappy document," Nungesser said as WDSU TV filmed the altercation. "It ain't worth the paper it's printed on. That is bullshit." Nungesser then told one of the federal officials, "You cover up for BP."

Marine Life

A dead jellyfish found on Long Beach, Mississippi, nearby a large amount of the aforementioned thick, brown foam, was tested and found to contain 15 ppm of ethanol, one of the chemicals in the dispersants, along with low levels of n-Butanol, another chemical present in the dispersants that are manufactured by Nalco Holding Company.

Nalco Holding Company has corporate ties to BP.

Based on comparative analysis of Corexit 9500 and the sample collected, the sample appears to contain approximately 500 ppm of dispersant.

Water

A water sample in the same area, taken in an area covered in thick, brown foam, contained propylene glycol, one of the confirmed ingredients of Corexit 9500.

Samples were also taken from a beach in Ocean Springs, Mississippi.

Blood Beach in Ocean Springs, Mississippi.

Blood Beach in Ocean Springs, Mississippi. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

A water sample at this area also contained ethelene glycol, as did a water sample taken from a fish pond in the front yard of a resident's home in Ocean Springs.

Another water sample from the beach contained diethylene glycol BE.

Dead sea turtle, Blood Beach, Ocean Springs, Mississippi.

Dead sea turtle, Blood Beach, Ocean Springs, Mississippi. (Photo: Erika Blumenfeld)

Additional Sampling and Conclusions

Earlier this month, Louisiana Environmental Action Network, Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper, in conjunction with the Subra Company, released results of sampling in the coastal regions of Louisiana.

Their press release states:

"The wetlands and ecosystem soil/sediment from Atchafalaya Bay eastward to the Louisiana/Mississippi state line contained 6 to 89 individual Alkylated Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) and Oil Range Organic Petroleum Hydrocarbons (ORO) up to 11,600 mg/kg [ppm] (1.16%) which corresponded to the fingerprint of the BP Louisiana Sweet Crude."

Sixty percent of the soil/sediment samples the groups tested contained up to 18 PAHs in excess of the marine sediment screening levels.

The groups tested seafood and found, "Alkylated PAHs were and continue to be detected in aquatic seafood species from the wetlands and estuaries along the Louisiana coast from Atchafalaya Bay eastward to the Louisiana/Mississippi border."

For example, they found oyster samples with up to 8,815 to 12,500 mg/kg (ppm) ORO, and blue crab samples containing up to 2,230 to 3,583 mg/kg (ppm) ORO.

Shrimp, mussels, fish and snail samples also contained exceedingly high levels of ORO and PAHs.

The press release concluded:

"Wetlands and ecosystem soil/sediment samples and aquatic tissue samples from all areas sampled contained Alkylated PAHs and Oil Range Petroleum Hydrocarbons."

Mississippi's Governor Barbour has said that Gulf seafood has been "tested more than any other food in the history of the universe."

State health departments in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama had issued swimming advisories while BP's well continued to gush oil into the Gulf of Mexico last summer. Since then, however, all three states have declared their beaches, waters and seafood safe from oil disaster related toxins.

Florida never issued any advisories, despite many residents reporting illnesses they attribute to the oil disaster.

US federal government agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency, Food and Drug Administration and the NOAA ,along with President Barack Obama himself, have declared the Gulf of Mexico, its waters, beaches and seafood, safe and open to the public.

The testing conducted on the samples taken by this writer only represent a tiny part of the Gulf compared to the massive area that has been affected by BP's oil catastrophe. A comprehensive sampling regime across the Gulf, taken regularly over the years ahead by independent scientists, is clearly required in order to implement appropriate cleanup responses and take public safety precautions.

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This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

Erika Blumenfeld is an internationally exhibiting artist and Guggenheim Fellow with a BFA in Photography from Parsons School of Design. She is known for her Light Recordings series, and her ambitious work The Polar Project, a series of environment-focused artworks that document the environment of Antarctica and the Arctic. Blumenfeld’s installations have been exhibited widely in galleries and museums in the US and abroad, and have been featured in /Art In America/, /ARTnews/ and more than half a dozen books. She is posting her photographs of the Gulf Coast on her blog.
 


Comments

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Great journalism about

Great journalism about omnicide. Thanks to Dahr and Erika for authentic investigative journalism. The Gulf was already dying before the BP spill. It is becoming a toilet bowl of industrial and human waste effluent. The bigger picture is that the human species is choosing to commit omnicide- the killing of all life on this planet. Read Derrick Jensen's book What We Leave Behind. He's one of few authors to address the core issues of why humans are killing so much, and what we can do about it.



Thank You, TRUTHOUT, et al.

Thank You, TRUTHOUT, et al.



it sure would be something

it sure would be something if the truth actually meant anything to the powers that be. Obviously they are complicit in the cover up and are thus as guilty as BP, though obviously more bankrupt morally. What a vile and dispicable bunch of human trash we have running the show.



In appreciation for this

In appreciation for this type of reporting, Americans should be in full rebellion against its criminal government and put out bounties for the bodies of any and every BP employee. Just when in F**K will Americans comprehend that this poisoning of the environment is a declaration of war against life for the sole benefit of profit? It's more than criminal -- it's an annihilation of decency and morality, waged against the earth and against people. Obama, have a drink of the Gulf: you and your corporate co-conspirators are murdering sociopaths.



anonymous 19:49 Did you know

anonymous 19:49 Did you know that the rhetoric of your post is very similar to the things Palin and Beck said leading the the murders in Tuscon. Man, you have to watch your tongue. As though putting a bounty on someone will solve any problem in this violent culture. Live by the sword, die by the sword. Duh!!



I object to Truthout

I object to Truthout accepting the post of anonymous 19:49. It advocates murder.



I was reading the article in

I was reading the article in this posting about Loughner and clicked on the word "Terrorist". This is what I got from wordnetweb.princeton.edu:

S: (n) terrorism, act of terrorism, terrorist act (the calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear



FIREMEN KNOW.... 1) 4 INCH

FIREMEN KNOW.... 1) 4 INCH DIAM. HOSE....
2) 750 POUNDS of PRESSURE.....
3) 1200 GALLONS of WATER a MINUTE...
BP PIPE 26 INCH DIAM = to 10-4 INCH HOSES...
ADD 3000+ POUNDS of PRESSURE..... for
80+ DAYS.......

BYE...BYE GULF+US + + +



Thank you truthout! Thank

Thank you truthout! Thank you Dahr and Erika! Your efforts and the risks you have taken are very appreciated!

It is extremely disturbing that mainstream media, government scientists, NOAA, EPA, BP and our "beloved"(sic) president lie continuously to us all.

I am so glad that there are still places, such as truthout, on the internet where the truth dares to be found and told! Thank you for taking the initiative (not to mention the risks) and conducting the tests and having the balls to publish the results. Many of us who have been searching for the truth are not surprised at what you found.

A deep sadness fills my heart when I think of how much pain and destruction was and continues to be inflicted on all the wildlife, environment and people of the Gulf of Mexico. What BP and our government did and continue to do is not only criminal, it is EVIL!

I wonder how far and wide the oil and corexit 9500 have spread. Up the East Coast? Throughout the Caribbean? Even further? I wonder if the die-offs that have been occurring, especially in the Gulf of Mexico and in nearby states, are connected to the BP spill or to chemtrail fallout (yet another cover up! ). I wish the dead fish, birds and sea life involved in the die outs could be tested by an organization, such as truthout! Thanks again for the wonderful work you do!!



Mark Dufrene, I read your

Mark Dufrene,

I read your words. Although I understand your passion for where you live, based on your words, it is very apparent that you didn't work on the oil "spill" itself. I worked 7 days a week, 12 & 14 hours a day for 6 months attempting to clean up the mess before I decided to quit....... in a capacity that you and so many others were not capable of engaging. Your waters surrounding La, Ms, Fl,....... are in a terrible state of disrepair at a level you clearly do not understand.... Along with the majority of the American public. It's sad, and terribly disturbing what has taken place. Hidden agendas, lies...... the list of indiscretions is long and deep (Another of the many reasons I left).
Before you Mark, or anyone, begins to speak words against someone (or entity) with you in their best interest, maybe you should take the time to look into things at a level that this gentleman has. Sometimes what you "see" is nowhere near fact.

I lived this daily for six months. Not long. But, long enough to know that these studies are only a dim light into the actual affects of what is reality.



Indeed, great

Indeed, great journalism.

And who is Mark Dufrene that JA Long's post is about or a comment to? JA Long's post is the only place that I find the name "Mark Dufrene", as well as only the first name of "Mark". JA Long's post is a good comment for this page, but I wonder who this Mark Dufrene person is.



How do the concentrations of

How do the concentrations of the chemicals mentioned above compare against controls from non-affected areas? There's a lot of calling out of very common chemicals (e.g. ethanol, propylene glycol) which are in thousands of products (including foods) and then saying they're in dispersants as if that proves the presence of the dispersant.

Also, how do you know the oil found is from the BP spill vs. natural leaks or just a random onshore event that spilled into the waterways?

It sounds like you have lots of good raw data, but it's not presented in a way that would convince somebody who's neutral on the matter.



Bill McGonigle, how do you

Bill McGonigle, how do you stand it? Being you, I mean.