Dos Bocas oil fire

The Dos Bocas oil fire was a 1908 blowout and oil fire that took place in Veracruz, Mexico. The fire started after a blowout occurred, causing crude oil to make contact with the flames that powered the oil derrick. The fire continued from 4 July 1908 to 30 August 1908 - until the oil deposit was burnt out. For the nearly two months that the fire burned, nearly 90000 barrels of oil flowed into the surrounding landscape each day. Ultimately, the Dos Bocas blowout (named for the two gaping black holes it left it the ground - "two mouths") ended up being one of the largest oil spills in the history of the oil industry.[1] The two large craters formed in the ground around the oil well were caused by the pressure of the oilfield. It was impossible to stop the flow of oil because the well casing had been blown off during the gush.[2]The heat exacerbated the difficulties workers faced when trying to stop the flow of oil. Temperatures were high which caused those working to put out the fire and contain the spill to be unable to go closer than a few hundred feet.[3] The oil coming out was a 200 feet tall column and the fire burned at over 1,000°F. [4] Twenty-seven kilometers away from the fire, town residents said that they were able to read a newspaper at night by the light of the flames.[2]

See also

References

  1. Miller, Shawn William (2007-09-10). An Environmental History of Latin America. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521848534.
  2. 1 2 Gray, Peter; Oliver, Kendrick (2004-09-04). The Memory of Catastrophe. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719063459.
  3. "Oil and Revolution in Mexico". publishing.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
  4. Union, Pan American (1914-01-01). Bulletin.

Further reading


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