Oil, Mud and Old Worms

Oil, Mud and Old Worms

It may be my imagination but didn”t the Diamondback pitchers

throw back more than the usual number of new baseballs prior to

the seventh game? Were the umpires not properly rubbing them

down with Lena Blackburne”s Baseball Rubbing Mud? We will

never know the answer to that mystery. Last week, we left

another mystery unsolved, namely, why did the whale opt to

leave the land and return to the sea? If the whale had foreseen

that it would be hunted to near extermination, in part for its oil to

light those oil lamps, would it have stayed on land?

Today, of course, another kind of oil takes center stage. Even

acknowledging the law of supply and demand, isn”t it a bit

strange that, with all the uncertainties in the Arab world, the

price of oil has dropped significantly? The search for oil outside

that desert world is and has been intense and controversial, as

shown by the recent arguments over drilling in Alaska. The

November Smithsonian magazine has an article that deals with

one of the alternate approaches, deepwater drilling. The article is

by James R. Chiles and is titled “Getting in Deep”.

The extraction of oil from the depths of the sea is not an

undertaking to be entered into lightly. This is especially true

when you”re talking drilling down into an ocean bottom a mile or

more deep. That is what”s going on in the Crazy Horse oil field

in the Gulf of Mexico about 75 miles south of the coast of

Mississippi. The Smithsonian article describes the operations

aboard the new drill ship, the Discover Enterprise. At 835 feet in

length, it”s about twice the distance from home plate to the

centerfield wall in Yankee Stadium. The cost of deepwater

drilling is impressive. When everything is counted in – support

personnel, 150-man crew, ship rental, etc. – it costs about a third

of a million bucks a day. I figure that”s about $10 million a

month and this particular job took about 8 months.

Let”s delve into the technology of drilling for oil in these deep

waters. Just like that special Rubbing Mud used to prepare a

major league baseball for action, the right mud is a key factor in

the drilling process. An MIT Web site outlines the various roles

that mud plays. First, consider that drill bit at the bottom of the

mile-long rotating shaft. For those who, like myself, are

mechanically challenged, the drill bit is that part at the bottom in

which is embedded the abrasive, pieces of diamond or other hard

material. While the rapidly rotating drill bit is cutting into the

sea bottom, it needs lubrication. Bring on the mud, which is

pumped down the “drill” pipe surrounding the rotating shaft. The

mud then exits through either the space surrounding the pipe or

the space between that pipe and another larger “rise” pipe

surrounding it. The special mud is made from different

materials, one of which might be the clay mineral called

bentonite. If I”m not mistaken, I think bentonite was something

investigators were looking for in those letters as a possible

carrier for the anthrax spores.

The mud not only lubricates the drill bit but also serves as the

garbage disposal by carrying away with it the debris from the

drilling. But that”s not all. The pressure of that mile-high

column of mud prevents any water or oil from gushing up

through the drill hole. Ok, you say, so much for the mud. Let”s

get on with it. But wait, it”s not that simple. That mud packed

into a mile high pipe weighs a good bit and if it weighs too much

the pressure can get so high that it causes cracking of the

sediment and rock around the drill bit. That can result in what

are known as “blowouts” of oil or gas.

Remember the good old days? (I forgot. Most of you probably

are too young!) We oldsters remember when we saw movies of

oil gushing high into the air out of newly drilled wells. The

scene would typically show those witnessing the gusher cheering

while being splattered by falling oil. Environmentalists hadn”t

appeared on the scene and all that spilled oil wasn”t a concern.

Now, a gusher is called a blowout, the change in terminology

perhaps an indication of today”s environmental concerns. Well,

in order to keep the weight of the mud low enough to prevent

blowouts in deepwater drilling, the composition of the pumped

mud has to be changed to make it lighter as the hole gets deeper.

So much for the mud. If you”re the guy or gal in charge of the

drilling operation on our ship, you”re sitting at your computer

control console. At your disposal is your ROV (remotely

operated vehicle). Anything that goes wrong a mile down has to

be tended to by the ROV – too deep for divers. This underwater

vehicle has a robotic arm and claw that allows it to carry out your

wishes. One of the ROV”s duties is to use a hose to spray

antifreeze around another important component of the drilling

operation, the BOP or blowout preventer. The BOP is a big deal.

It”s roughly four stories high (47 feet) and, with its innards of

valves, electronics and hydraulic gear, weighs in at a mere 360

tons! The BOP surrounds the drill pipe and in emergencies it

swings into action to clamp down the well and prevent a

blowout.

Maybe you”re wondering about that ROV spraying antifreeze on

the floor of the sea. Even though we”re in the warm waters of the

Gulf of Mexico, the temperatures are near freezing at the bottom

and the pressures are tremendous. You may remember that

we”ve talked about ice at the bottom of the oceans. Not ordinary

ice, but methane hydrate, a compound of water and methane that

forms at these pressures and temperatures. The methane hydrate

ice can clog up the pipes lead to trouble – hence the antifreeze.

The article describes how, when they were ready to pull up stake

and leave that particular Crazy Horse well, a latch on the BOP

got stuck. This essentially pinned the ship to the bottom of the

sea. The feeling was that methane hydrate ice had formed and

was jamming the latch. It took a day of applying antifreeze and

trying to jockey the ship enough to spring the latch loose.

Finally, the latch opened but they never knew whether methane

hydrate was really the culprit.

This has only touched on a couple of the many problems of

deepwater drilling. While researching the subject, I came across

a Penn State Web site citing some work published last year in

Nature by Professors Frederick Williams and Charles Fisher and

graduate assistant Derk Bergquist. They were also carrying out

deep-water studies but weren”t interested in oil. Instead, their

concern was the marine life surrounding so-called hydrocarbon-

seep sites in the Gulf of Mexico. These seep sites are places in

cold, calm water where fluids from the earth”s interior seep up

from the sea bottom. Seep sites are quite different from those

hot, sometimes violent thermal vents on the seafloor. In both

cases, the fluids emitted end up spawning a weird world of life

around the vents.

We”ve all seen pictures of the tubeworms that grow around those

hot thermal vents. They also thrive around the cold seep vents.

This isn”t particularly exciting except for one thing. These seep

site tubeworms turn out to be the true old-timers of the animal

kingdom, some estimated to be at least 175 to 250 years old!

How did the Penn State crew determine this? It”s a pretty neat

experiment. They took this special submarine down to the seep

sites. The submarine was equipped to allow them to stain the

white tubeworms” casings a blue color. A year later, they

returned and collected the animals. By measuring the new white,

unstained growth they could determine how much the tubeworms

grew during the year. Here I”m guessing, but the Web site report

implies that they obtained measurements on tubeworms of

different lengths. Such data would also give them a handle on

how the growth rate varies with age. Just like us, the tubeworms

grow in spurts, more rapidly when they are young than when

they”re older.

With the data they gathered, the researchers calculated that it

takes 175 to 250 years for a tubeworm to grow in length to two

meters (about the height of Michael Jordan). While they don”t

give the measurements, they do say that they”ve collected

specimens “much, much longer” than 2 meters. This, of course,

implies that these tubeworms are much, much older. Who

knows, Methuselah may finally have met his match!

Back to baseball, my hat”s off to those D-backs, who certainly

earned a well-deserved victory. As a confirmed Yankee-hater in

my youth, when my Philadelphia Athletics suffered horrendous

defeats at the hands of the Bronx Bombers, I never thought I

would be rooting for them in my dotage. But in the last few

years these guys in pinstripes have shown us the meaning of

teamwork and they have embodied the spirit of that great Yankee

philosopher who said, “It”s never over ”til it”s over.” Now it”s

over, but thanks for a great ride!

Allen F. Bortrum