Structured pathways in the turbulence organizing recent oil spill events in the Eastern Mediterranean
Guillermo Garcia-Sanchez, Ana M. Mancho, Antonio G. Ramos, Josep Coca,, Stephen Wiggins

TL;DR
This paper uses Lagrangian Coherent Structures and satellite data to trace the origin and transport pathways of oil spills in the chaotic ocean environment of the Eastern Mediterranean.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining satellite observations and computational modeling to identify the source and pathways of oil spills in complex oceanic conditions.
Findings
Successful identification of oil spill origin points
Validation of models with satellite data
Insights into chaotic ocean transport mechanisms
Abstract
The chaotic nature of ocean motion is a major challenge that hinders the discovery of spatio-temporal current routes that govern the transport of material. Certain material, such as oil spills, pose significant environmental threats and these are enhanced by the fact that they evolve in a chaotic sea, in a way which still nowadays is far from being systematically anticipated. Recently such an oil spill event has affected the Mediterranean coast of several Middle Eastern countries. No accidents were reported for these spills previous to their arrival at the coast, and therefore there was no hint of their origin. Modelling such an event, in which uncertainties are increased due to the lack of information on where and when the spills was produced, stretches available technologies to their limits, and requires the use of novel ideas that help to understand the essential features of oil and…
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