National Crude Oil Spill Fate and Natural Attenuation Research Site near Bemidji, Minnesota
The primary focus of the science team at the site is to improve the understanding of the mobilization, attenuation, transport, fate, potential health effects, and remediation of petroleum in the subsurface through collaborative research, peer-reviewed publications, presentations, data, and educational activities.
The objective of the project is to improve the understanding of the mobilization, transport, and fate of crude oil in the
shallow subsurface. The U.S. Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology Program began an interdisciplinary research project in 1983 at the site of a crude-oil spill near Bemidji, Minnesota. Research is conducted by scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey and from several academic institutions. Currently we have four primary research objectives: (1)characterizing the nature, toxicity and prevalence of partial transformation products emanating from the crude oil source, (2) evaluating the secondary impacts [such as arsenic cycling] of biodegradation, (3) understanding the timeframe of natural attenuation of petroleum hydrocarbon source zones, and (4) developing field tools, methods, and data that support evaluations of environmental health effects of natural attenuation of crude oil.
A fact sheet describing results from the Bemidji research site is available.
The spill occurred in 1979 when a pipeline transporting crude oil broke. After cleanup efforts were completed in 1980, about 400,000 liters of oil remained in the unsaturated zone and near the water table. This continues to be a source of contaminants to a shallow outwash aquifer. The oil is moving as a separate fluid phase, as dissolved petroleum constituents in ground water, and as vapors in the unsaturated zone. Native microbes are converting the petroleum derivatives into carbon dioxide, methane, and other biodegradation products.
The publications below are associated with this project.
Cross section area at the Bemidji Crude Oil spill site
Lessons learned decades after an oil spill faded from headlines
Biodegradation of crude oil into nonvolatile organic acids in a contaminated aquifer near Bemidji, Minnesota
Ground water contamination by crude oil near Bemidji, Minnesota
Spatial variation in saturated hydraulic conductivity of sediments at a crude-oil spill site near Bemidji, Minnesota
Transport and degradation of semivolatile hydrocarbons in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer, Bemidji, Minnesota
Transport and degradation of semivolatile hydrocarbons in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer, Bemidji, Minnesota
Methane production and consumption monitored by stable H and C isotope ratios at a crude oil spill site, Bemidji, Minnesota
Field and modeling studies of multiphase fluid flow at the Bemidji, Minnesota crude-oil spill site
Crude-oil spill research project near Bemidji, Minnesota - Bibliography, 1984-1994
Hydrogeologic data collected from a crude-oil spill site near Bemidji, Minnesota, 1983-91
Hydrogeology and water quality of glacial-drift aquifers in the Bemidji-Bagley area, Beltrami, Clearwater, Cass, and Hubbard Counties, Minnesota
Streamflow entering and leaving Lake Bemidji, Beltrami County, Minnesota, July 1987 through September 1989
Aeromagnetic map of the northeast portion of the Bemidji 1 x 2 Quadrangle, Minnesota
The primary focus of the science team at the site is to improve the understanding of the mobilization, attenuation, transport, fate, potential health effects, and remediation of petroleum in the subsurface through collaborative research, peer-reviewed publications, presentations, data, and educational activities.
The objective of the project is to improve the understanding of the mobilization, transport, and fate of crude oil in the
shallow subsurface. The U.S. Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology Program began an interdisciplinary research project in 1983 at the site of a crude-oil spill near Bemidji, Minnesota. Research is conducted by scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey and from several academic institutions. Currently we have four primary research objectives: (1)characterizing the nature, toxicity and prevalence of partial transformation products emanating from the crude oil source, (2) evaluating the secondary impacts [such as arsenic cycling] of biodegradation, (3) understanding the timeframe of natural attenuation of petroleum hydrocarbon source zones, and (4) developing field tools, methods, and data that support evaluations of environmental health effects of natural attenuation of crude oil.
A fact sheet describing results from the Bemidji research site is available.
The spill occurred in 1979 when a pipeline transporting crude oil broke. After cleanup efforts were completed in 1980, about 400,000 liters of oil remained in the unsaturated zone and near the water table. This continues to be a source of contaminants to a shallow outwash aquifer. The oil is moving as a separate fluid phase, as dissolved petroleum constituents in ground water, and as vapors in the unsaturated zone. Native microbes are converting the petroleum derivatives into carbon dioxide, methane, and other biodegradation products.
The publications below are associated with this project.