|
Welcome |
|
How does an ecosystem
recover from a major |
|
As you will learn from this Discovery Story, the answer is not simple. It isn't easy to determine whether a particular area of shoreline has recovered from oiling during a spill, or how to expect it to look when it has.
In March 1989, the tanker Exxon Valdez grounded on Bligh Reef in
Alaska’s Prince William Sound, rupturing its hull and spilling nearly 11
million gallons of crude oil. It remains the largest oil spill ever to occur in U.S. waters. |
||
Watch & Discover: An Oil Spill Trajectory Model - Computer simulation of how oil traveled across Prince William Sound during the first week after the Exxon Valdez oil spill. |
||
All the facts aren't yet in, but here you can read about how NOAA biologists have been monitoring the long-term effects of this major spill on marine life, the various cleanup efforts, and the recovery of Prince William Sound ever since that unfortunate day.
You can analyze the Mearns Rock Time Series, which is a sequence of photos of the same oiled rock in Prince William Sound. The photos were taken once each year since the Exxon Valdez oil spill occurred there. You can try your hand at working with some real data collected by scientists at Mearns Rock, and answer the question:
|
||
http://www.scilinks.org/certificate.asphttp://www.scilinks.org/
|