Washed up Tarballs a common sight on La Jolla Shores

I gathered this small collection of tarballs from a short stroll at La Jolla Shores. (Judith Lea Garfield)
It’s common for me to walk the beach at La Jolla Shores and see flattish scraps of tar lying on the sand.
I even see them under water, wafting back and forth above the sand before they wash in to the beach. Frequently, small or nascent hitchhikers like barnacles are attached. Called tarballs, though not spherical, they form in the ocean when blobs of oil combine with swirling debris like sand grains to form solid yet bendable chunks of tar.
The pieces I see at La Jolla Shores are mostly sand-dollar size and look not unlike stones with somewhat ragged edges. If you’ve walked the beach many a time and haven’t noticed them, it may be because they blend in so well with the genuine article — well-worn, dark stones dredged up by tidal and wave action.
Tarballs likely resemble each other in size and shape because all that rolling around beneath the waves, along with tidal thrashings, selects for such constraints. Tarballs are not a new phenomenon at La Jolla Shores, or elsewhere, for that matter, as they plague coastlines throughout the world.
Beach tar may originate from offshore oil rigs or from onshore bulk oil storage or production facilities. The tar may get a start from people who dump automotive oil into their neighborhood storm sewers, which ultimately drain into the ocean.

Youngster gooseneck barnacles -- the commonest critters I find anchored to tarballs -- overwhelm their small tarball substrate. (Judith Lea Garfield)
Seafarers also do their bit when emptying boat or ship bilges, which are tainted with heavy crude oil. The extent of tarballs on any given beach varies widely. On some shores, they are rarely seen unless a significant oil spill has occurred nearby.
For the most part, wind and current conditions control the likelihood of whether tar fragments sink to the sea bottom or drift. Tar on the beach is not always human induced; natural seeps also leak from the ocean floor.
In fact, the sticky stuff has played a role in human society dating as far back as 13,000 years. Local Native Americans used seep material as a kind of all-purpose adhesive to waterproof their oceangoing plank boats and to waterproof baskets and containers.
In more modern times, say within the last 100 years, natural asphalt seeps have been mined to pave California’s roadways. What, then, is the root of the tarballs I constantly see at La Jolla Shores?
I spoke to Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) emeritus biologist Pat Masters, and after conferring with her husband and SIO emeritus coastal oceanographer Doug Inman, she said, “Doug is unaware of any natural seeps in the [La Jolla submarine] canyon. Doug and I suspect you are seeing bilge tar being carried from off San Diego Bay or Mission Bay by southwest winds that cause an eddy in the lee of Point La Jolla [located off La Jolla Cove].”
Eddies are currents best described as rivers in the ocean that move contrary to the direction of the main current. Some flow close enough to the shoreline to have an impact on the beach.
Here, the fast-moving current can and does quickly move tarballs onshore. Thirty years ago, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration published a report on the “tarball problem.”
They determined that tarballs originate from three main sources: 49 percent hail from land (for example, automotive oils dumped into sewers and vehicles leaking petroleum products onto the roads) where storm drain pollution and runoff from rain washes oils into the ocean; 40 percent come from oceangoing vessels when bilges are pumped and tanks are cleaned; and a scant 11 percent arise from natural seepage from the ocean floor.
The study further concluded how exactly tarballs form: Once in contact with water, oils decompose, and as they do, the lighter fractions evaporate. The remaining substance is the heavy asphalt-like material I see washed up on the beach. Small amounts of tarballs generally don’t pose a serious threat to public health or the environment.
However, walk on a beach with tar and some tacky residue may end up stuck to the bottom of your feet or shoes. If beach tar makes contact with your skin, wash it off when you can, because it may cause an allergic reaction like a rash.
State and federal policies don’t allocate governmental funds to clean up minimal tarballs, but the government will get involved if the quantity of tar threatens public safety or if taking action will mitigate environmental damage.
Judith Lea Garfield, biologist and underwater photographer, has authored two natural history books about the underwater park off La Jolla Cove and La Jolla Shores. www.judith.garfield.org. Questions, comments or suggestions? Email jgarfield@ucsd.edu.
The La Jolla Village News, where this story orginally appeared, is an SDNN partner.
Tags: La Jolla Shores, SDNN, seepage, tarballs
- Suspicious object prompts school evacuation
72 - Adam Lambert: Get the birthday cake ready
38 - Hemet woman arrested after Bank of America robbed
36 - Lake Elsinore teen, 13, killed after being struck by pickup
30 - Teachable Moments: Sally Smith off Serra site council at packed meeting
29 - Tickets still available for Adam Lambert's Indio concert
29 - Menifee USD pulls dictionaries due to explicit word
25 - Salm: Think our teachers are doing a lousy job? You try doing it
24 - Feds: Phony U.S. Marshal made it into S.D. airport with 'prisoner'
22 - Opponents to high-speed rail route through Rose Canyon stand firm
19
- Kerrigan family disputes homicide ruling in father's death The family of Olympic skater Nancy Kerrigan insisted Tuesday that they do "not blame anyone" for her father's death and criticized a medical examiner's finding that Daniel Kerrigan died of a heart rhythm problem after a fight with his son.
- Cuba touts 125-year-old woman as world's oldest Relatives in eastern Cuba claim to have held a 125th birthday party for a woman named Juana Bautista de la Candelaria Rodriguez, but it is not clear if she is really that old.
- Medicaid cuts could lead to diaper rationing in Nevada Adult diapers could be rationed and personal care assistants may need to buy their own disposable gloves to help cut $109 million from the state's Medicaid costs, state lawmakers were told Tuesday.
- To Market: For the love of red food If you associate Valentine's Day with all things red, get ready to hit the markets and have some fun.
- City Heights shooting leaves one wounded A shooting in a City Heights alley left one person wounded Tuesday afternoon.
- Hundreds attend MSJC foundation gala at Temecula winery The gala is the foundation's second signature event to raise funds for student scholarships, faculty mini grants and other philanthropic endeavors.
BlogsAir Charter, Airports & AviationAir2Air Ends Moon Program1 hour, 8 minutes ago Giving’em the BusinessWhat businesses can learn from the Leno-Conan debacle3 hours, 14 minutes ago A More Perfect UnionPeterson: San Diego could still be the ‘Enron by the Sea’7 hours, 47 minutes ago Blogs‘Twilight’ star wows Temecula teens22 hours, 29 minutes ago San Diego at Work BlogElected Officials Sponsor Job Fairs in San Diego23 hours, 23 minutes ago Giving’em the BusinessFinancial fitness: Estate tax planning 2010, or nailing Jell-O to the wall1 day, 3 hours ago |
|
