Cleaning up fuel spills on Macquarie Island
Sites near the Fuel Farm and Main Power House on Macquarie Island are contaminated with petroleum hydrocarbons.
Photo: James Doube
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Between 2003 and 2008 the location and extent of fuel contamination at the three sites were precisely defined using soil sampling test pits, piezometers (sampling tubes) and mini-piezometers. The test pits enabled soil to be taken for laboratory analysis of metals, nutrients and total petroleum hydrocarbons. Piezometers allowed sampling of groundwater (for hydrocarbon contamination) and oxygen levels at different depths throughout the soil profile.
This mini-piezometer, with an oxygen sensor attached, is used to take water samples to measure groundwater chemistry.
Photo: Jim Walworth
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In the 2008-09 Antarctic season the team began aerating and adding nutrients to contaminated soil at all sites – two areas around the Main Power House, and the eastern side of the Fuel Farm. The initial focus of the work is on the areas of highest hydrocarbon concentration (>4000 mg/kg soil), to reduce both the concentration of hydrocarbons and further movement through the soil.
The bioremediation process is being monitored and optimised where necessary, using oxygen sensors, piezometers and mini-piezometers (to sample water), through soil sampling, by measuring carbon dioxide and volatile organic compounds, and by examining changes in soil microbial communities and chemical processes in the soil.
The Risk and Remediation team install piezometers at a contaminated site on Macquarie Island.
Photo: Jim Walworth
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WENDY PYPER
Corporate Communications, AAD
What microbes eat oil?
It is likely that on Macquarie Island the microbes work together as a community to degrade hydrocarbons, in a process with many steps. Some use oxygen to do this and, when the oxygen is low, other species use nitrate or ammonia instead. Other microbes known as 'autotrophs', use the carbon dioxide produced by the hydrocarbon-degrading microbes as an energy source. Similar types of microbes are found in ordinary garden soil, where they are involved in the process of decomposition. The ability to degrade petroleum hydrocarbons is surprisingly widespread in the environment and may be related to the fact that some plants and algae produce similar complex compounds. SHANE POWELL Environmental Protection and Change program, AAD |
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