A Crude Awakening in the Gulf of Mexico
Scientists are just beginning to grasp how profoundly oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill has devastated the region
- By Michelle Nijhuis
- Photographs by Matt Slaby
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
Life seems almost normal along the highway that runs the length of Grand Isle, a narrow curl of land near the toe of Louisiana’s tattered boot. Customers line up for snow cones and po’ boys, graceful live oaks stand along the island’s central ridge, and sea breezes blow in from the Gulf of Mexico. But there are few tourists here this summer. The island is filled with cleanup crews and locals bracing for the next wave of anguish to wash ashore from the crippled well 100 miles to the southeast.
Behind Grand Isle, in the enormous patchwork of water and salt marsh called Barataria Bay, tar balls as big as manhole covers float at the surface. Oily sheens, some hundreds of yards across, glow dully on the water. Below a crumbling brick fort built in the 1840s, the marsh edges are smeared with thick brown gunk. A pair of dolphins break the water’s surface, and a single egret walks along the shore, its wings mottled with crude. Inside the bay, the small islands that serve as rookeries for pelicans, roseate spoonbills and other birds have suffered waves of oil, and many of the mangroves at the edges have already died. Oil is expected to keep washing into the bay for months.
Even here, at the heart of the disaster, it’s hard to fathom the reach of the spill. Oil is penetrating the Gulf Coast in countless ways—some obvious, some not—and could disrupt habitats and the delicate ecology for years to come. For the scientists who have spent decades trying to understand the complexities of this natural world, the spill is not only heartbreaking, but also deeply disorienting. They are just beginning to study—and attempting to repair—a coast transformed by oil.
About a hundred miles inland from Grand Isle, on the shady Baton Rouge campus of Louisiana State University, Jim Cowan and a dozen of his laboratory members gather to discuss their next move. In the agonizing days since the spill began, Cowan’s fisheries lab has become something of a command center, with Cowan guiding his students in documenting the damage.
Cowan grew up in southern Florida and has a particular affection for the flora, fauna and people of the lush wetlands of southern Louisiana; he’s studied Gulf ecosystems from inland marshes to offshore reefs. Much of his research has focused on fish and their habitats. But now he worries that the Gulf he’s known for all these years is gone. “These kids are young, and I don’t think they realize yet how it’s going to change their lives,” he says of the oil. “The notion of doing basic science, basic ecology, where we’re really trying to get at the drivers of the ecosystem...” He pauses and shakes his head. “It’s going to be a long time before we get oil out of the equation.”
Cowan knows all too well that the Deepwater Horizon spill is only the latest in an almost operatic series of environmental disasters in southern Louisiana. The muddy Mississippi River used to range over the entire toe of Louisiana, building land with its abundant sediment. As people constructed levees to keep the river in place, the state began to lose land. The marshy delta soil continued to compact and sink below the water, as it had for millennia, but not enough river sediments arrived to replace it. Canals built by the oil and gas industry sped soil erosion, and violent storms blasted away exposed fragments of marshland. Meanwhile, as the flow of river water changed, the Gulf of Mexico began to intrude inland, turning freshwater wetlands into salt marshes.
Today, southern Louisiana loses about a football field’s worth of land each and every half-hour. Pavement ends abruptly in water, bayous reach toward roadsides, and mossy crypts tumble into bays. Nautical maps go out of date in a couple of years, and boat GPS screens often show watercraft seeming to navigate over land. Every lost acre means less habitat for wildlife and weaker storm protection for humans.
But for Cowan and many other scientists who study the Gulf, the oil spill is fundamentally different. Though humans have dramatically accelerated Louisiana’s wetlands loss, soil erosion and seawater intrusion, these are still natural phenomena, a part of the workings of any river delta. “The spill is completely foreign,” Cowan says. “We’re adding a toxic chemical to a natural system.”
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Comments (13)
With my 6th grade Gifted and Talented group(SPARK for Texas), we are actually going to NOLA to meet Dr. Cowan and talk about the spill. We are also going to plant grasses along the beach so as to help the sediments deposit and help the marshes grow back. This will help reduce the impact of natural disasters like Katrina and other hurricanes. This would have also helped keep the oil around the marshes so LA would not to have so much oil on the beach, as it really does.
Posted by Elena Olivieri on November 15,2010 | 08:16 PM
The images of what has been done to the gulf are quite lonesome, and the amount of oil disgusts me, but by this article there seems to be hope that this might no stay a silent spring.
Posted by Ross Murdock on November 10,2010 | 10:18 PM
This is such a big impact on the wildlife in that area, but also the rest of the world should care. They should try to do something about it. For example, with some other GT students from my middle school, I will got to Louisiana and work with Cowan to clean up the terrible incident.
Posted by Elena Olivieri Age 11 on November 8,2010 | 01:02 PM
It is amazing how people like Jim Cowan can get so distraught about something like the Deepwater Horizon spill. Mother Nature has been "spilling" oil into the Gulf for eons and has many ways to dispose of it. Concentrated spills like the Horizon spill cause lots of local damage, oiled birds, damaged marshes, etc. But to worry that "the Gulf he's known for all these years is gone" is unnecessary. Even today, it appears that the natural bacteria in the Gulf have disposed of essentially all of the "huge" underseas plume. Ralph Porter seems to have a much more realistic view of nature.
Posted by Nick Clark on September 10,2010 | 02:21 PM
"A third of the living creatures in the sea died, and a third of the ships were destroyed." (Revelation 8:9). While the Gulf oil spill may not be the fulfillment of that prophecy, the Gulf oil spill does show that something like that could happen. The idea isn't so farfetched. "He who testifies to these things says, 'Yes, I am coming soon.' Amen. Come, Lord Jesus." (Revelation 22:20).
Posted by Robert Holt on August 28,2010 | 12:16 AM
Great article. CHSL has tested the rainwater in the area... horrid results. EPA still has not tested one drop. I just dont get it.. We were out in Barataria Bay and the marsh last week and what we noticed was the lack of wildlife... We also took air samples and water samples.
THanks for writing this!
Rain water test results can be found on the NEWS link on the site www.CHSLouisiana.org
Posted by Joannie Hughes on August 28,2010 | 10:41 AM
wow this helped alot with my science class great article
Posted by kyleigh on August 25,2010 | 10:17 PM
It's interesting that the only person whose post makes him appear to think this whole thing is made up by the reporters actually works (or did work at one time) for the Toledo BP Oil Refinery in Oregon, Ohio US according to his MySpace page.
You can live on the gulf coast and not see what you don't want to see if it suits your agenda.
Posted by MerriAnnie Smith on August 25,2010 | 07:36 PM
Even sadder are the alleged LSU professors that took money from BP to say that it's not really all that bad. What a disservice to the region, the state and their alleged manhood.
Posted by Carl Swacker on August 21,2010 | 10:59 AM
Amazing. I have been living in Grand Isle for the last three months and I really need to get around the island more. Reporters seem to see a lot of things I cannot find in the great quantities that they seem to like to report on.
Posted by David Rysz on August 20,2010 | 11:54 AM
The politics of America needs an overhaul and the earth's politics also need change. The change Obama promised is about as good as the dip he took in the Gulf, the oil poisoned Gulf seemingly not hurt he said, the other day to photo op America and the world that things according to him are OK. Sad phony news ploy. Very sad. Where does the poisoning end?
Posted by David Beasley on August 19,2010 | 02:06 PM
Great article, most entertaining, educational, well researched and colorful treatise that I have read on the subject.!
Posted by drew wheelan on August 18,2010 | 07:19 PM
I feel great sadness for the people of the Gulf Area, their entire way of life is changed. As an X scuba diver my grief was and is heartfelt for the dying wildlife. The Gulf will never be the same. The U.S. government must ban all deep water drilling for oil, why encourage the continuance of this kind of fuel. Afterall global warming is going to kill us all if governments do not act much faster in reducing greehouse gasses. I am afraid that GREED is usually what wins out, GREED and no considerations for us little people. Its a sad day
Posted by Nina Council on August 18,2010 | 06:20 PM