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History
About 9:30am Wednesday, January 20, the
phone rang at my desk at the News Press. "The ocean
is boiling around Platform A," a male voice said. The
anonymous caller stated the drill bit struck a high pressure
gas pocket which kicked back out of control and everyone
except the drilling crew was evacuated from the platform.
That was 24 hours ago, and during the night, the gas eruption
turned into an uncontrolled rush of crude oil.
– Excerpt from An
Ocean of Oil by Robert
Sollen, published 1998 (page 47).
1969 Oil Spill –
The environmental disaster that inspired
the formation of GOO!
On the afternoon of January 28, 1969, an environmental nightmare
began in Santa Barbara, California. A Union Oil Co. platform
stationed six miles off the coast of Summerland suffered a
blowout. Oil workers had drilled a well down 3500 feet below
the ocean floor. Riggers began to retrieve the pipe in order
to replace a drill bit when the "mud" used to maintain
pressure became dangerously low. A natural gas blowout occurred.
An initial attempt to cap the hole was successful but led
to a tremendous buildup of pressure. The expanding mass created
five breaks in an east-west fault on the ocean floor, releasing
oil and gas from deep beneath the earth.
For eleven days, oil workers struggled
to cap the rupture. During that time, 200,000 gallons of crude
oil bubbled to the surface and was spread into a 800 square
mile slick by winds and swells. Incoming tides brought the thick
tar to beaches from Rincon Point to Goleta, marring 35 miles
of coastline. Beaches with off-shore kelp forests were spared
the worst as kelp fronds kept most of the tar from coming ashore.
The slick also moved south, tarring Anacapa Island's Frenchy's
Cove and beaches on Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa and San Miguel Islands.
Ecological
Impact
Animals that depended on the sea were hard hit. Incoming tides
brought the corpses of dead seals and dolphins. Oil had clogged
the blowholes of the dolphins, causing massive lung hemorrhages.
Animals that ingested the oil were poisoned. In the months that
followed, gray whales migrating to their calving and breeding
grounds in Baja California avoided the channel —their
main route south.
The oil took its toll on the seabird
population. Shorebirds like plovers, godwits and willets which
feed on sand creatures fled the area. But diving birds which
must get their nourishment from the waters themselves became
soaked with tar.
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