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Weathering of Oil Spilled in the Marine Environment
Journal article

Weathering of Oil Spilled in the Marine Environment

Puspa Adhikari, Matthew A. Tarr, Phoebe Zito, Edward B. Overton, Gregory M. Olson and Christopher M. Reddy
09-01-2016

Abstract

Gulf of Mexico Ocean. Deepwater Horizon Explosion and Oil Spill, 2010 Oil spills. Oil pollution of the sea.
Crude oil is a complex mixture of many thousands of mostly hydrocarbon and nitrogen-, sulfur-, and oxygen-containing compounds with molecular weights ranging from below 70 Da to well over 2,000 Da. When this complex mixture enters the environment from spills, ruptures, blowouts, or seeps, it undergoes a continuous series of compositional changes that result from a process known as weathering. Spills of petroleum involving human activity generally result in more rapid input of crude oil or refined products (diesel, gasoline, heavy fuel oil, and diluted bitumens) to the marine system than do natural processes and urban runoffs. The primary physicochemical processes involved in weathering include evaporation, dissolution, emulsification, dispersion, sedimentation/flocculation, microbial degradation, and photooxidation.
url
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.77View

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#14 Life Below Water

Source: SDGs in the Output

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