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Home Science News Marine

Decades-Old Industrial Waste Barrels Continue to Affect Ocean Floor Off Los Angeles

September 9, 2025
in Marine
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In the murky depths off the coast of Los Angeles lies a haunting legacy of industrial waste disposal that continues to puzzle scientists and environmentalists alike. Since the 1930s and extending into the early 1970s, countless barrels filled with various forms of industrial contaminants, including the toxic pesticide DDT, were dumped into the deep ocean. For decades, the exact makeup and environmental effects of these submerged barrels remained shrouded in mystery, in part due to their remote and inaccessible location. However, ground-breaking research conducted by scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, has now begun to unravel a part of this dark chapter in marine pollution history, revealing new insights into the persistence and impact of these oceanic time capsules.

During a series of seafloor explorations in 2021 and 2023 employing the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) SuBastian, researchers surveyed the ocean floor near the Catalina Island dump site. They discovered hundreds of barrels, some surrounded by eerie, ghostly white halos embedded in the sediment—an enigmatic phenomenon that had long captivated scientists but lacked a clear explanation. Initial theories speculated that these halos resulted from DDT contamination, but closer examination of sediment samples yielded no correlation between DDT concentration and the halo presence, deepening the mystery regarding the barrels’ contents.

A pivotal shift in understanding came when researchers measured sediment pH around the halos and discovered extraordinarily alkaline conditions with pH levels reaching around 12—significantly higher than typical seawater, which maintains a pH near 8. This extreme alkalinity was found to inhibit microbial diversity and activity in the sediment, with only specialized microbes adapted to such caustic environments able to persist. This microbial profile strikingly resembled those found at natural hydrothermal vents or alkaline hot springs, environments often characterized by their chemical hostility to most forms of life but inhabited by extremophilic organisms.

Chemical analyses revealed that the sediments within the halos had hardened into a concrete-like crust primarily composed of the mineral brucite, which forms through reactions between leaked alkaline waste chemicals and magnesium ions present in seawater. This crust cements surrounding sediments, preserving the halo formations. Furthermore, as brucite slowly dissolves over time, it maintains the high alkalinity in the localized environment around the barrels, reinforcing this extreme habitat which drastically alters the local microbial ecosystem.

The implications of these findings extend beyond the mere identification of the halo-forming substances. While DDT remains infamous for its toxicity and ecological damage, this new evidence suggests that alkaline industrial wastes—previously underappreciated as pollutants—also impose long-lasting environmental stress. The alkaline conditions not only transform the sediment chemistry but suppress typical microbial communities and favor extremophiles, thereby reshaping the ocean floor’s biological landscape. These conditions have persisted for more than fifty years, an unexpected and concerning duration that challenges prior assumptions about the dilution and neutralization of chemical pollutants in marine environments.

“This discovery forces a reconsideration of the legacy of industrial dumping off Southern California,” explains Johanna Gutleben, postdoctoral researcher and first author of the study. “The presence of these persistent alkaline conditions complicates our understanding of the environmental impacts, especially since alkaline waste was not previously at the forefront of ocean pollution investigations.” She questions what types of alkaline substances were considered hazardous enough to warrant barrel containment, especially when other forms of acidic wastes appear to have been disposed of differently.

Scripps marine microbiologist Paul Jensen, senior author of the study, points out the paradox of the alkaline waste’s longevity. While initially expecting high pH substances to simply neutralize and disperse in seawater, the sustained alkalinity mediated by mineral precipitation suggests a novel form of pollutant persistence. This elevates alkaline waste alongside DDT as a pollutant with substantial long-term ecological consequences, sparking urgent calls to expand the focus of marine pollution research beyond well-known contaminants.

From a broader regulatory and environmental management perspective, this study underscores the fragmented nature of historical ocean dumping records. Southern California’s deep-sea dumping sites accepted a wide range of waste types including refinery effluents, chemical wastes, military explosives, and even radioactive materials, with very little known about their combined environmental footprints. The visual identification of alkaline waste barrels through their distinct white sediment halos offers a practical tool to assess contamination hotspots rapidly during underwater surveys, helping prioritize future remediation or monitoring efforts.

The sediment sampling carried out aboard the Schmidt Ocean Institute’s research vessel Falkor was crucial for these revelations. Using precision robotic coring near barrels with and without halos, scientists encountered solidified sediment crusts around the halo barrels, preventing normal sampling techniques and prompting the collection of hardened crust fragments for detailed lab analysis. These samples confirmed that the halos are mineralogical as much as chemical phenomena, tied intricately to the alkalinity-driven geochemical processes in the surrounding environment.

Microbial DNA analyses presented further surprises. While sediment near the barrels contained drastically lowered bacterial diversity compared to typical seafloor conditions, the microbial taxa identified were extremophiles known from alkaline habitats, including certain taxa that metabolically resemble those at hydrothermal vents. This finding not only expands understanding of extremophile distribution but also highlights how anthropogenic waste can induce conditions favoring specialized ecosystems in unexpected settings.

Moreover, earlier research by co-author Lisa Levin showed a related decline in small animal biodiversity around these barrels, indicating that the alkaline waste’s influence palpable extends beyond microbes to broader benthic communities. The extent and ecological significance of these biological shifts remain subjects for future investigation, especially as the number of alkaline waste barrels on the seafloor remains uncertain, making the overall impact difficult to quantify.

Looking ahead, the research team is embarking on novel studies to explore microbial communities capable of degrading legacy DDT pollution within these sediments. Jensen notes that biological breakdown of DDT, rather than physical removal, constitutes the most plausible remediation pathway. Attempting to physically excavate or disturb these contaminated sediments risks spreading toxins by stirring contaminated plumes, making in situ microbial remediation preferable despite its gradual pace.

The new insights into alkaline waste deposition highlight the complex chemical and biological transformations wrought by decades-old ocean dumping. By decoding the mechanisms behind these ghostly sediment halos, the study advances both scientific understanding and marine environmental stewardship, emphasizing the need for integrated approaches combining geochemistry, microbiology, and environmental policy to address longstanding and evolving ocean pollution challenges.


Subject of Research:
Extremophile microbial communities and geochemical impacts linked to legacy industrial waste barrels dumped in the deep ocean off Southern California.

Article Title:
Extremophile hotspots linked to containerized industrial waste dumping in a deep-sea basin

News Publication Date:
9-Sep-2025

Web References:

  • UC San Diego Scripps Institution of Oceanography DDT Coastal Dumpsite project
  • EPA Southern California Ocean Disposal Site Investigations
  • Schmidt Ocean Institute Research Vessel Falkor mission logs

References:

  • Gutleben, J., Jensen, P., Levin, L., et al. (2025). Extremophile hotspots linked to containerized industrial waste dumping in a deep-sea basin. PNAS Nexus. https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgaf260
  • Levin, L. et al. (2024). Impacts of Industrial Waste Dumping on Benthic Biodiversity. Marine Pollution Bulletin. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116463

Image Credits:
Credit: Schmidt Ocean Institute

Keywords:
Microbiology, Pollution, Environmental Science, Marine Biology, Geochemistry, Deep-sea Ecosystems, Industrial Waste, Ocean Dumping, Alkaline Pollution, Extremophiles

Tags: Catalina Island dump siteenvironmental science discoveriesindustrial contaminants in oceanindustrial waste disposallegacy of industrial wastemarine environmental impactmarine pollution historyocean floor pollutionremotely operated vehicle explorationScripps Institution of Oceanography researchseafloor sediment analysistoxic pesticide DDT
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