Gulf of Mexico (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans

National Geographic29 minutes read

The history of the Gulf of Mexico involves piracy, slavery, and conflict, along with significant events like the asteroid impact that wiped out dinosaurs globally. The area also saw environmental disasters like the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, highlighting the complex relationship between human activity and the Gulf's natural history.

Insights

  • The Gulf of Mexico has a rich history filled with significant events, including asteroid impacts, oil drilling disasters, and World War II naval battles involving German U-boats.
  • Advanced technology like underwater scanning is crucial in uncovering historical secrets hidden beneath the Gulf's waters, such as the discovery of a German U-boat sunk during WWII and the asteroid impact site that led to the extinction of dinosaurs.

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Recent questions

  • What caused the mass extinction of dinosaurs?

    An asteroid impact in the Gulf of Mexico.

  • How did the Deepwater Horizon disaster occur?

    An explosion and fire on the rig.

  • What technology is used to scan the sea floor?

    Advanced underwater scanning technology.

  • How do companies search for new oil fields?

    By drilling exploration wells called wildcats.

  • What led to the discovery of the U-166 wreck?

    A depth charge attack.

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Summary

00:00

"Gulf of Mexico: History, U-Boat, Asteroid"

  • The Gulf of Mexico holds a history of piracy, slavery, and conflict.
  • Advanced underwater scanning technology is used to create 3D images of the sea floor.
  • A German U-Boat is found at the bottom of the ocean off the coast of New Orleans.
  • An asteroid impact in the Gulf of Mexico wiped out dinosaurs globally 66 million years ago.
  • Drilling for oil led to a major environmental disaster in US history.
  • Fossil sites in New Jersey reveal a mass prehistoric graveyard.
  • An asteroid strike in the Gulf of Mexico caused a global catastrophe, wiping out dinosaurs.
  • The impact site is concealed under sedimentary rock, requiring analysis of rocks to determine its age.
  • The asteroid's power is estimated to be equivalent to ten billion Hiroshima bombs.
  • The asteroid strike led to a global cooling event, causing a mass extinction of species.

17:44

Deepwater Horizon Disaster: Gulf Oil Spill Tragedy

  • The well-heads connect to a central manifold up to 100 feet high, controlling the flow of oil and gas from the oil field to the production rig.
  • The rig separates oil and gas before transporting them to shore through pipelines stretching for hundreds of miles along the sea bed.
  • 43,000 miles of pipeline are present across the Gulf of Mexico.
  • Companies search for new oil fields in the Gulf as reserves near shore deplete.
  • Special rigs like the Deepwater Horizon drill exploration wells called wildcats, reaching miles below the sea bed.
  • The Deepwater Horizon is an exploration drilling rig used for initial drilling and production equipment installation.
  • In 2010, the Deepwater Horizon strikes oil 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana in the Macondo area.
  • An explosion and fire on the Deepwater Horizon result in 11 missing workers and the rig sinking after two days of burning.
  • 60,000 barrels of oil per day escape into the Gulf due to the disaster.
  • Engineers design a capping stack to seal the Macondo well, stopping the flow after 87 days and 5 million barrels of oil escaping.

33:08

WW2 U-boat mystery in Gulf of Mexico

  • The Gulf of Mexico reveals a WW2 German submarine, U-166, raising questions about its presence and demise.
  • Hitler's declaration of war on the US in 1941 opens a new battleground in the Gulf of Mexico.
  • US faces peril from Nazi U-boats disrupting Allied shipping along the eastern seaboard.
  • Lack of blackout and unescorted ships make US vessels easy targets for U-boats.
  • U-boats target Allied ships, including oil tankers, to aid the German war effort.
  • U-166 sinks the Robert E Lee off New Orleans, leading to a mystery surrounding its fate.
  • The discovery of U-166's wreck, 140 miles away, reveals it was sunk by a depth charge attack.
  • The wrecks of Robert E Lee and U-166 are considered war graves, with the U-boat credited to Herbert Claudius.
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