IDENTIFICATION OF EXXON-VALDEZ OIL IN SEDIMENTS AND TISSUES FROM PRINCE-WILLIAM-SOUND AND THE NORTHWESTERN GULF OF ALASKA BASED ON A PAH WEATHERING MODEL

Citation
Jw. Short et Ra. Heintz, IDENTIFICATION OF EXXON-VALDEZ OIL IN SEDIMENTS AND TISSUES FROM PRINCE-WILLIAM-SOUND AND THE NORTHWESTERN GULF OF ALASKA BASED ON A PAH WEATHERING MODEL, Environmental science & technology, 31(8), 1997, pp. 2375-2384
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Engineering, Environmental
ISSN journal
0013936X
Volume
31
Issue
8
Year of publication
1997
Pages
2375 - 2384
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-936X(1997)31:8<2375:IOEOIS>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
We used a first-order loss-rate kinetic model of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) weathering to evaluate 7767 environmental samples co llected for the Exxon Valdez oil spill (EVOS) for the presence of spil led oil. The model was developed from experiments with gravel coated w ith crude oil and washed for 6 months. The modeled PAH included the 14 most persistent compounds of 31 analyzed by GC/MS. Parameters include loss-rate constants related to the energy required for PAH to escape from petroleum and a quantitative index of weathering. The model accou nts for 91% of the temporal variability of modeled PAH concentrations. We compared the discrepancies between measured and model-predicted PA H concentrations of EVOS samples with a probability distribution of th ese discrepancies derived from the experimental weathering results, On ly 1541 field samples contained sufficient PAH for valid application o f the model; three-fourths fit the model at alpha greater than or equa l to 0.01 type I error, 9% fit an alternate model characterized by the absence of weathering, 17% fit neither model, and a few fit both mode ls. The 1164 total samples that fit the weathering model account for 8 6% of the summed PAH concentrations detected in all 7767 samples. We c onclude that first-order loss-rate kinetics account for the dominant P AH weathering processes in the EVOS and that the rate of weathering is determined mainly by the ratio of surface area to volume of petroleum in the environment.