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Message

First clear satellite view in days..
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:12 pm
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:12 pm
And it looks worse than ever. It's going to get in the loop current very soon.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:19 pm to baytiger
That looks terrible. To think of huge "oil plumes" 3K below the surface.
What a disaster.
What a disaster.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:25 pm to TejasHorn
Actually
I'm taking a closer look at it in google earth.. and it appears to already be in the gulf stream. I'll post it in a minute.
I'm taking a closer look at it in google earth.. and it appears to already be in the gulf stream. I'll post it in a minute.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:33 pm to baytiger
this is the MODIS image overlayed on top of the US Navy's surface ocean current model in google earth, annotated with my awesome MSPaint skills.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:43 pm to baytiger
equally opportunity disaster. So maybe they will know a bit of our pain. Hate to see this happen but also tired of the why go back to New Orleans talk....
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:46 pm to baytiger
Bay, how far north do the models show the loop current extending this hurricane season?
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:48 pm to mmill32
quote:
Bay, how far north do the models show the loop current extending this hurricane season?
this model isn't a forecasting model, it's a nowcasting model. The last output (and the one I used in the map above) is actually yesterday's currents.
This post was edited on 5/17/10 at 4:49 pm
Posted on 5/17/10 at 4:59 pm to baytiger
Good stuff Bay, thanks for the info. They should know today from analyzing the samples if the oil has made it in to the Loop Current.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 5:04 pm to Mudminnow
How far south are they going?
I'd be very, very surprised if they even need to take samples. If we can see it from space, you'd be able to see it from a boat.
I'd be very, very surprised if they even need to take samples. If we can see it from space, you'd be able to see it from a boat.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 5:09 pm to baytiger
a scheduled regular sampling trip. Just happens there is oil all over the place now
Posted on 5/17/10 at 5:25 pm to baytiger
Thats just natural seepage...........
>=
>=
Posted on 5/17/10 at 5:28 pm to baytiger
Hey Bay, it looks like the loop is pretty far north at the moment. Have you heard if it is expected to continue northward and eventually pinch off to form a big eddy?
Posted on 5/17/10 at 5:30 pm to Sid in Lakeshore
it probably will pinch off in an eddy, because it does that every few months, but I have no idea when. I'm not an oceanographer.
Posted on 5/17/10 at 6:18 pm to baytiger
quote:
I'm not an oceanographer.
Me neither. Thanks for the pics.
Posted on 5/18/10 at 9:46 am to baytiger
bay, what are the prospects of the Florida panhandle avoiding oil?
Posted on 5/18/10 at 10:13 am to Chicken
I'd guess pretty good looking at the satellite images from these links posted. I'm heading to Destin July 4th so keeping my fingers crossed this current can dump the oil somewhere else 
Posted on 5/18/10 at 10:51 am to skewbs
what the possibility it all ends up in cuba or venezuela?
Posted on 5/18/10 at 11:31 am to Chicken
Favorable surface currents and winds have kept them clean so far. But we are probably about done with northerly winds this season, and if a south-southwest low level wind pattern sets up - as it nearly always does late spring through early Fall - they are in trouble.
Here LINK you can see that a sustained south-southwest wind pattern would push the slick into the eddy south of the panhandle, where it would probably circulate until being flushed into the loop. Also, notice how quickly the oil pushes southward now that it has entered the loop.
Here LINK you can see that a sustained south-southwest wind pattern would push the slick into the eddy south of the panhandle, where it would probably circulate until being flushed into the loop. Also, notice how quickly the oil pushes southward now that it has entered the loop.
This post was edited on 5/18/10 at 11:38 am
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