Saturday, October 23, 2010

Investigating potentially hidden damages in the Gulf of Mexico

Investigating potentially hidden damages in the Gulf of Mexico

Penn State Professor Chuck Fisher is working to determine the effects of the oil spill on the inhabitants dwelling deep in the Gulf of Mexico. Click on the image above for a video about Fisher's research. Chuck Fisher, Penn State professor of biology, is familiar with the Gulf of Mexico, and more specifically with the unique and rarely seen world miles below the surface. Following the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig disaster that resulted in a massive oil spill there, concerns arose about the potential for long term damage to the sea floor and it's inhabitants.

Now, Fisher and a team of scientists from across the nation are investigating how the unique life forms that dwell deepest in the Gulf are adapting and surviving. The floor of the Gulf of Mexico is the leading oil producing region in the continental United States. It is also home to one of the most complex continental shelves in the world. Comprised of oil and gas bearing shale, with a salt sheet underneath and a large layer of sea sediment on top, the Gulf bed has been continuously cracking and shifting since the Jurassic Period. This results in a natural and slow seepage of gas and oil throughout the sea floor.

No comments :

Popular Posts Last Week

Popular Posts This Month

Popular Posts All Time