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Reddy, Sylva, and Seewald monitoring oil and gas separation during extraction.

Reddy, Sylva, and Seewald monitoring oil and gas separation during extraction.
Reddy, Sylva, and Seewald monitoring oil and gas separation during extraction.
Reddy, Sylva, and Seewald monitoring oil and gas separation during extraction.
Reddy, Sylva, and Seewald monitoring oil and gas separation during extraction.
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165903
Kleindinst, Thomas N.
Reddy, Sylva, and Seewald monitoring oil and gas separation during extraction.
Still Image
07/15/2010
graphics/Seewald_sampler_Gulf_Oil/_TOM9226.jpg
The Seewald sampler (IGT, Isobaric Gas-tight Sampler) was being opened and the samples from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill were being taken out. They were looking to calculate the amount of oil and gas that was coming out of the Gulf leak.
Image of The Day caption:
WHOI researchers (l to r) Chris Reddy, Sean Sylva, and Jeff Seewald prepare to tap into the pressurized chamber holding material collected from the damaged wellhead at the Deepwater Horizon oil spill site. A team from WHOI had used a specialized device called an Isobaric Gas-Tight sampler (black object near Seewald) to collect the material, which was the only sample taken directly from the broken wellhead. The sample was analyzed for its gas and oil content, to estimate the amount of each released during the spill. It also served as a reference to determine whether unknown oil samples came from the spill. Seewald and others at WHOI designed the sampler about 10 years ago to collect fluids spewing from hydrothermal vents.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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