Icebergs and oil tankers soon to mix
Independent computer models by A. Rasmussen of the U.S. Geological Survey and R. Bindschadler (N.A.S.A.) indicate that the Columbia Glacier, which fronts a fjord adjoining the Valdez shipping channel, will undergo a rapid retreat in 1982-85, which will result in calving of icebergs at rates up to 8-11 cubic km/year. The snout of the glacier is now on a shoal at 75 meter depth and backing slowly into deeper water; the models, which are based on field studies of the Columbia Glacier since 1977 and of calving glaciers in general, show that the rate of calving is proportional to the depth of water at the snout. According to the U.S. Coast Guard, it may be necessary to prohibit tanker traffic into Valdez during periods of maxmium calving. Storage facilities at Valdez can hold eight days worth of oil flow through the trans-Alaska pipeline at the current rate of 1.6 million bbl/day, and the pipeline could be shut down for two days without causing problems on the North Slope.
- OSTI ID:
- 6402644
- Journal Information:
- Science (Washington, D.C.); (United States), Journal Name: Science (Washington, D.C.); (United States) Vol. 209:4454; ISSN SCIEA
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
022000* -- Petroleum-- Transport
Handling
& Storage
ALASKA
ALASKA OIL PIPELINE
ALASKAN NORTH SLOPE
CAPACITY
CONTROL
DEPTH
DIMENSIONS
ENERGY SOURCES
FEDERAL REGION X
FOSSIL FUELS
FUELS
GLACIERS
HAZARDS
HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS
ICE
MARITIME TRANSPORT
MATHEMATICAL MODELS
NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
NORTH AMERICA
OXYGEN COMPOUNDS
PETROLEUM
PIPELINES
SHIPS
STORAGE FACILITIES
TANKER SHIPS
TRAFFIC CONTROL
TRANSPORT
US COAST GUARD
US DOI
US DOT
US GS
US ORGANIZATIONS
USA
WATER