Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/79488
Type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: The 2019 Brazilian oil spill: Insights on the physics behind the drift
Authors: Lessa, Guilherme C.
Teixeira, Carlos Eduardo Peres
Pereira, Janini
Santos, Felipe M.
Keywords in Brazilian Portuguese : Poluição;Correntes oceânicas;Circulação costeira;Ressurgência costeira
Keywords in English : Pollution;Ocean currents;Coastal circulation;Coastal upwelling
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Journal of Marine Systems
Citation: LESSA, Guilherme C; TEIXEIRA, Carlos Eduardo Peres; PEREIRA, Janini; SANTOS, Felipe M. The 2019 Brazilian oil spill: Insights on the physics behind the drift. Journal Of Marine Systems, v. 222, p. 103586, 2021. Disponível em: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmarsys.2021.103586. Acesso em: 22 jan. 2025.
Abstract: This study uses global numerical model results of ocean and atmospheric circulation, as well as local wind, wave and current meter data, to investigate the structure of the ocean and coastal circulation potentially associated with the transport of oil that affected thousands of kilometers of the Brazilian coast in 2019. Our analysis suggests the oil was brought close to the continental shelf sometime in August 2019 by the southern branch of South Equatorial Current, and was initially advected towards the north by the North Brazilian Current and shelf currents pushed by SE winds. The onset of negative along-shore winds close to the coast in September–October 2019 turned the coastal along-shore drift south, a situation that persisted throughout the spring and summer seasons. Along the east coast, where observational data was available, landward cross-shelf flows below 17 m of depth, associated with coastal upwelling conditions, advected the oil from the slope onto the outer and mid-shelf. On the inner-shelf the oil was finally pushed towards the beaches by the wave action close to the bottom. Reports of oil arriving on the east coast followed changes in coastal wind and current patterns very closely. It is suggested that before reaching the shelf, the oil drifted at depths larger than 17 m, perhaps reaching several tens of meters.
URI: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/79488
ISSN: 0924-7963
Author's Lattes: http://lattes.cnpq.br/2756113489132080
Access Rights: Acesso Aberto
Appears in Collections:LABOMAR - Artigos publicados em revistas científicas

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