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Gulf Oil Spill: Hurricanes Could Carry Toxins As Far As New England (VIDEO) – Huffington Post 0

Posted on September 20, 2010 by bp complaints

Reuters

Gulf Oil Spill: Hurricanes Could Carry Toxins As Far As New England (VIDEO)
Huffington Post
According to Mitra, not only toxic hydrocarbons from the Gulf oil spill but the chemical dispersants used, as well, could be carried far inland by storms.
Oil Spill Update: Feds Provide Detailed Weekly Avian Victims ReportsAudubon Magazine (blog)
The BP well is dead. Long live lessons from the Gulf oil spill.Christian Science Monitor
Gulf oil spill: investors cheered as fears over BP's future dissipateThe Guardian
The Star-Ledger – NJ.com –Catholic Online –Bloomberg
all 7,598 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Hurricanes Could Carry Gulf “Oil” Inland – National Geographic 0

Posted on September 02, 2010 by bp complaints

Financial Times

Hurricanes Could Carry Gulf "Oil" Inland
National Geographic
As Atlantic hurricane season heats up, storms could send toxic hydrocarbons lingering from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill surging inland, scientists say.
The Gulf Oil Spill: Impacts on the Food IndustryQuality Assurance & Food Safety
AUM professor gets K to study Gulf oil spillWSFA
BP says it learned from battling huge oil spillHouston Chronicle
The Associated Press –BusinessWeek –Financial Times
all 1,036 news articles »

gulf oil spill updates – Google News

Ocean currents likely to carry oil to Atlantic 25

Posted on June 22, 2010 by bp complaints

A detailed computer modeling study released today indicates that oil from the massive spill in the Gulf of Mexico might soon extend along thousands of miles of the Atlantic coast and open ocean as early as this summer (see www2.ucar.edu ). The modeling results are captured in a series of dramatic animations produced by the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and collaborators. The colors represent a dilution factor ranging from red (most concentrated) to beige (most diluted). The simulations do not make any assumptions about the daily rate or total amount of oil spilled and the dilution factor does not attempt to estimate the actual barrels of oil at any spot. Instead, one unit per day of a liquid “dye tracer” is injected in the model at the spill site (injected continuously over the period April 20 through June 20). The animation on this page shows possible scenarios of what might happen to dye released in the upper 65 feet of ocean at the spill site. The dilution factor depicts how dye released at the site of the spill will be progressively diluted as it is transported and mixed by ocean currents. For example, areas showing a dilution factor of 0.01 would have one-hundredth the concentration of oil present at the spill site. The animation is based on a computer model simulation, using a virtual dye, that assumes weather and current conditions similar to those that occur in a typical year. It is one of a set of six scenarios (see www2.ucar.edu ) that simulate



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