Experimental design of the Svalbard shoreline field trials |
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Authors: | Chantal C Gué nette,Gary A Sergy,Edward H Owens,Roger C Prince,Kenneth Lee |
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Affiliation: | a SINTEF Applied Chemistry, Environmental Engineering, 7034 Trondheim, Norway b Environment Canada, #200, 4999, 98th Avenue, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6B 2X3 c Polaris Applied Sciences, Inc., #302, 755 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110, USA d ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Co., Annandale, NJ 08801, USA e Centre for Offshore Oil and Gas Environmental Research, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, P.O. Box 1006, Dartmouth, NS, Canada B2Y 4A2 |
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Abstract: | Experimental oil spills on three mixed-sediment beaches in Svalbard, Norway, were designed to evaluate the effectiveness of in situ shoreline cleaning treatments to accelerate natural recovery. These were: sediment relocation (surf washing), mixing (tilling), bioremediation (fertilizer application), and bioremediation combined with mixing. Additionally, natural attenuation was studied as a treatment option. An intermediate fuel oil was applied to the sediment surface in the upper intertidal zone at three experimental sites, each of which had different sediment characteristics and wave-energy exposure. Over a 400-day period, the experiments quantified oil removal, documented changes in the physical character of the beach as well as oil fate and behaviour, assessed toxicity effects associated with treatment, and validated oil-mineral aggregate formation as a result of the selected treatment techniques. The three sites were chosen based on significant differences, and each treatment was quantitatively compared only with other treatments at that site.This paper describes the physical location and the experimental design of the field trials. Some of the key issues that were addressed in the design included: the methodology for application of oil, the application of treatment techniques, the realistic simulation of real-world conditions, and the sampling protocols to overcome sediment and oiling heterogeneity typical of mixed-sediment beaches in order to allow quantitative comparisons of the treatments. |
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Keywords: | Oil spill shoreline treatment experimental design sampling |
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