Community | July 05, 2010 | 24 comments

Danger of Tsunamis From Trapped Gigantic Methane Bubble In The Gulf Of Mexico.

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keithponder
A new and less well known asymmetric threat has surfaced in the Gulf of Mexico oil gusher. Methane or CH4 gas is being released in vast quantities in the Gulf waters. Seismic data shows huge pools of methane gas at the location immediately below and around the damaged "Macondo" oil well. Methane is a colorless, odorless and highly flammable substance which forms a major component in natural gas. This is the same gas that blew the top off Deep water Horizon and killed 11 people. The "flow team" of the US Geological Survey estimates that 2,900 cubic feet of natural gas, which primarily contains methane, is being released into the Gulf waters with every barrel of oil. The constant flow of over 50,000 barrels of crude oil places the total daily amount of natural gas at over 145 million cubic feet. So far, over 8 billion cubic feet may have been released, making it one of the most vigorous methane eruptions in modern human history. If the estimates of 100,000 barrels a day -- that have emerged from a BP internal document -- are true, then the estimates for methane gas release might have to be doubled.


Methane and Poison Gas Bubble

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found high concentrations of gases in the Gulf of Mexico area. The escape of other poisonous gases associated with an underground methane bubble -- such as hydrogen sulfide, benzene and methylene chloride -- have also been found. Recently, the EPA measured hydrogen sulfide at more than 1,000 parts per billion (ppb) -- well above the normal 5 to 10 ppb. Some benzene levels were measured near the Gulf of Mexico in the range of 3,000 to 4,000 ppb -- up from the normal 0 to 4 ppb. Benzene gas is water soluble and is a carcinogen at levels of 1,000 ppb according to the EPA. Upon using a GPS and depth finder system, experts have discovered a large gas bubble, 15 to 20 miles wide and tens of feet high, under the ocean floor. These bubbles are common. Some even believe that the rapid release of similar bubbles may have caused the sinking of ships and planes in the Bermuda Triangle.

50,000 to 100,000 PSI

The intractable problem is that this methane, located deep in the bowels of the earth, is under tremendous pressure. Experts agree that the pressure that blows the oil into the Gulf waters is estimated to be between 30,000 and 70,000 pounds per square inch (psi). Some speculate that the pressure of the methane at the base of the well head, deep under the ocean floor, may be as high as 100,000 psi -- far too much for current technology to contain. The shutoff valves and safety measures were only built for thousands of psi at best. There is no known device to cap a well with such an ultra high pressure.

Oxygen Depletion

The crude oil from the "Macondo" well, which is damaging the Gulf of Mexico, contains around 40 percent methane, compared with about 5 percent found in typical oil deposits. Scientists warn that gases such as methane, hydrogen sulfide and benzene, along with oil, are now depleting the oxygen in the water and are beginning to suffocate marine life creating vast "dead zones". As small microbes living in the sea feed on oil and natural gas, they consume large amounts of oxygen which they require in order to digest food, ie, convert it into energy. There is an environmental ripple effect: when oxygen levels decrease, the breakdown of oil can't advance any further.

Fissures or Cracks

According to geologists, the first signs that the methane may burst its way through the bottom of the ocean would be manifest via fissures or cracks appearing on the ocean floor near the path of least resistance, ie, the damaged well head. Evidence of fissures opening up on the seabed have been captured by the robotic midget submarines working to repair and contain the ruptured well. Smaller, independent plumes have also appeared outside the nearby radius of the bore hole. When reviewing video tapes of the live BP feeds, one can see in the tapes of mid-June that there is oil spewing up from visible fissions. Geologists are pointing to new fissures and cracks that are appearing on the ocean floor.

Fault Areas

The stretching and compression of the earth's crust causes minor cracking, called faults, and the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico has many such fault areas. Fault areas run along the Gulf of Mexico and well inland in Mexico, South and East Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and the extreme western Florida Panhandle. The close coupling of new fissures and cracks with natural fault areas could prove to be lethal.

Bubble Eruption

A methane bubble this large -- if able to escape from under the ocean floor through fissures, cracks and fault areas -- is likely to cause a gas explosion. With the emerging evidence of fissures, the tacit fear now is this: the methane bubble may rupture the seabed and may then erupt with an explosion within the Gulf of Mexico waters. The bubble is likely to explode upwards propelled by more than 50,000 psi of pressure, bursting through the cracks and fissures of the sea floor, fracturing and rupturing miles of ocean bottom with a single extreme explosion.

Cascading Catastrophe Scenarios

1. Loss of Buoyancy

Huge methane gas bubbles under a ship can cause a sudden buoyancy loss. This causes a ship to tilt adversely or worse. Every ship, drilling rig and structure within a ten mile radius of the escaping methane bubble would have to deal with a rapid change in buoyancy, causing many oil structures in its vicinity to become unstable and ships to sink. The lives of all the workers, engineers, coast guard personnel and marine biologists -- measuring and mitigating the oil plumes' advance and assisting with the clean up -- could be in some danger. Therefore, advanced safety measures should be put in place.

2. First Tsunami with Toxic Cloud

If the toxic gas bubble explodes, it might simultaneously set off a tsunami traveling at a high speed of hundreds of miles per hour. Florida might be most exposed to the fury of a tsunami wave. The entire Gulf coastline would be vulnerable, if the tsunami is manifest. Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and southern region of Georgia might experience the effects of the tsunami according to some sources.

3. Second Tsunami via Vaporization

After several billion barrels of oil and billions of cubic feet of gas have been released, the massive cavity beneath the ocean floor will begin to normalize, allowing freezing water to be forced naturally into the huge cavity where the oil and gas once were. The temperature in that cavity can be extremely hot at around 150 degrees Celsius or more. The incoming water will be vaporized and turned into steam, creating an enormous force, which could actually lift the Gulf floor. According to computer models, a second massive tsunami wave might occur.
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    oil spill oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill video
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24 comments // Danger of Tsunamis From Trapped Gigantic Methane Bubble In The Gulf Of Mexico.

  • ghostofamerica
    • 0
      ghostofamerica  
    • we will all be punished. they said it would never fail, USA. too big to fail, USA. within months from now, the coastline of every country will be so toxic, people on land will get sick and die from it all around the world, masses will return to the central deserts, seeking refuge from the new and predictably toxic geo-evolution.

    • 1 year ago
  • LetItGo
    • +1
      LetItGo  
    • I live in central florida, less then an hour away from areas affected by gas. I can tell you that a lot of us are getting things together for an early evacuation. Better safe than sorry, I hear Colorado's a nice place to live....

    • 1 year ago
  • CalgarC
  • pmurph364
  • keithponder
    • 0
      keithponder  
    • Image
    • Google MC262, then Mississippi Canyon 262, the BP-MC262. Mississippi Canyon 262 is an active volcano field located in the Gulf of Mexico. found oil but they found it in a mud volcano. Some geologist believe that they carelessly activated a huge mud volcano in the Gulf of Mexico. Look at videos of mud volcanoes and notice the exact similarities in the eruption process. Also oil spills have never created the look of redness in the ocean waters. THE VOCANO CANNOT BE CAPPED AND THEY KNOW IT. This is the biggest FUCK UP that we'll ever see in our lifetime. GREED.

      Another report from 1994 of 4 active mud volcanoes in the gulf of Mexico.

      The report specifically mentions the "Mississipi Canyon" which is where the Deepwater Horizon was located.

      http://www.springerlink.com/content/n0l1866647046823/

      Barry Kohl1 and Harry H. Roberts2

      (1) Department of Geology, Tulane University, 70118 New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
      (2) Coastal Studies Institute and Department of Geology and Geophysics, School of Geoscience, Louisiana State University, 70803 Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA

      Received: 26 October 1993 Revised: 6 July 1994

      Abstract Samples were collected for foraminiferal studies by the Johnson Sea-Link I and II manned submersibles on the Louisiana continental slope. This paper documents that the mud, extruded onto the sea floor from depth by four mud volcanoes, ranges in age from Miocene to Pleistocene based on studies of the planktonic foraminiferal fauna. The vents are in water depths ranging from 300 to 690 m located in Garden Banks Block 382, Green Canyon Blocks 143 and 272, and Mississippi Canyon Block 929. Two mud volcanoes in GB 382 and MC 929 also have rich fossil foraminiferal microfaunas. We suggest that the extrusion of fossil sediments onto the sea floor during the Quaternary is a reasonable explanation for frequent occurrences of displaced fossil microfaunas encountered at depth in wells drilling on the flanks of salt diapirs in the slope environment. Results of this study have important implications for age dating subsurface sediments in bathyal locations.

    • 1 year ago
  • tommic
    • +1
      tommic  
    • DK Matai and Huffington post are very credible, this is a very unstable situation getting worse every day. The relief well is going to fail, the bore hole has been fractured, the pressure coming up is greater than anything BP can shove down the hole. BP is just trying to save face, but its too late for that. This could very well end up being the worst enviornmental disaster ever even eclipsing Chernobyl. If and a very big if, this does come to be and tsunami happens Flordia is more screwed than any other state, its flat as a pancake with no elevation in the state higher than a couple of hundred feet above sea level. Louisiana is also done, gone, goodbye New Orleans, history, from San Padre island in Texas all the way around to Flordia. There can be no successful evacuation, millions would die. I wonder if a disaster like the one envisioned would change enough peoples mind about the direction of mankind?

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • CaptDoug
  • bailey78
  • Incredulous
  • mattefross
  • bailey78
  • Still_Falling
    • -1
      Still_Falling  
    • I would love to see this happen.
      I know it is all theoretical - but just imagine the shear awesomeness of this event.

      The mental picture I am developing is of something that would make James Cameron and those Avatar CGI developers, green with envy.
      Methane tsunami - damn my geek boner is at a 10.

    • 1 year ago
  • keithponder
  • Still_Falling
    • -2
      Still_Falling  
    • keithponder:

      No apology is needed.
      I want to see what will happen if that much methane ignites.

      I wonder if it will look like I imagined it or will it be less spectacular?
      Would it form a tsunami or just a little wave?
      Would the flames race across the water in all directions instantaneously or not?
      I need these questions answered, why is that offensive?

    • 1 year ago
  • idealist
  • Still_Falling
  • keithponder
  • iloveme_tatertot
    • +4
      iloveme_tatertot  
    • Still_Falling:

      Shamefully, George Carlin and I agree in the most morbid of ways, and I DO live in Florida, and I am surrounded by people that I love.

      George Carlin: I think it's certainly apparent by now that one of the things I enjoy in life is excess... I like things that are excessive. I like excessive behavior, excessive language, excessive violence... it's fun. It's interesting. It's exciting. I like it when nature is excessive. That's why I like natural disasters. All these natural disasters that've been going on, I fucking love 'em. I can't get enough of them. Ah, when nature's going crazy, throwing things around, scaring people and destroying property, I'm a happy fucking guy. I'm a happy fucking guy. I look at it this way... For centuries now, man has done everything he can to destroy, defile, and interfere with nature: clear-cutting forests, strip-mining mountains, poisoning the atmosphere, over-fishing the oceans, polluting the rivers and lakes, destroying wetlands and aquifers... so when nature strikes back, and smacks me in the head and kicks me in the nuts, I enjoy that. I have absolutely no sympathy for human beings whatsoever. None. And no matter what kind of problem humans are facing, whether it's natural or man-made, I always hope it gets worse. Don't you? Don't you? Don't you have a part of you, a part of you that secretly hopes everything gets worse? When you see a big fire on TV... don't you hope it spreads? Don't you hope it gets completely out of control and burns down six counties? You don't root for the firemen do you? I mean I don't want them to get hurt or nothing, but I don't want them to put out my fire. That's my fire - that's nature showing off and having fun. I like fires. You know something else I like? Those spring floods in the Midwest! Aren't they great? Like clockwork, spring floods in the Midwest. Now I'm starting to notice... I'm starting to catch on, that every year... it's the same story. Another flood, in the same place, with the same people, on the same river- SAME FUCKING PEOPLE! And these people do not move, they will not fucking move! They repaint, put down new carpeting and wallpaper and they move right back into the same fucking house on the flood plain, next to the river, and then they wonder why grandma's floating downstream with the parakeet on her head! Fourth time, again, fourth fucking time. There's no learning curve with these people. It's very hard to feel sorry for them. Every year - same people, same rowboats! Out there paddling around... rescuing a chicken. What the fuck kind of a life is that? "Well our kids love it here...? Oh really, what do they got, gills? And while they're showing all that action on the screen, the announcer's saying to me "It's been raining steadily for three months now, the ground can't any more water... The river is cresting higher than it has it two centuries, the levees have washed away...? And I just hope it keeps raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining and raining, and it rains steadily for five years... and then after that, for ten years it's cloudy. With occasional showers. And the river never returns to its natural banks! It becomes a completely new river, and the borders of three states have to be changed, and all the maps and atlases have to be redrawn and reprinted... and no one's couch ever completely dries out. For years and years, every time they sit down there's always that little "Squish...? "Dan, Linda, come on in you guys, have a seat" - "Squish!" "Squish!" I like that. I'm an interesting guy.

    • 1 year ago
  • onemalefla
  • iloveme_tatertot
  • EthicalVegan
  • TheMidnightWolf
    • +2
      TheMidnightWolf  
    • damn...what can we do about this problem? see what you did BP and US gov't? you always have to wait for a disaster to happen to do something better and benificial and "be green"

    • 1 year ago
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