Difference between revisions of "Oil slicks"

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:[[Oil spill pollution impact and recovery]]
 
:[[Oil spill pollution impact and recovery]]
 
:[[Overview of oil spills events from 1970 to 2000]]
 
:[[Overview of oil spills events from 1970 to 2000]]
:[[Oil sensitivity]]
+
:[[Oil sensitivity mapping]]
 
:[[Oil spill monitoring]]
 
:[[Oil spill monitoring]]
 
:[[Index of vulnerability of littorals to oil pollution]]
 
:[[Index of vulnerability of littorals to oil pollution]]

Revision as of 15:48, 6 February 2024

Definition of Oil slicks:
An oil spill (sometimes called an oil slick) is the unintentional release of liquid petroleum hydrocarbon into the environment as a result of human activity.[1]
This is the common definition for Oil slicks, other definitions can be discussed in the article

Notes

The term often refers to marine oil spills, where oil is released into the ocean or coastal waters. Oil can refer to many different materials, including crude oil, refined petroleum products (such as gasoline or diesel fuel) or by-products, ships' bunkers, oily refuse or oil mixed in waste. Oil is also released into the environment from natural geologic seeps on the seafloor, for example along the California coastline. Most man-made oil pollution comes from land-based activity, but public attention and subsequent regulation has tended to focus most sharply on seagoing oil tankers.

Related articles

Oil spill pollution impact and recovery
Overview of oil spills events from 1970 to 2000
Oil sensitivity mapping
Oil spill monitoring
Index of vulnerability of littorals to oil pollution
Coastal pollution and impacts


References