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Chemical Fire at Marathon Refinery [electronic resource].
Title & Author:

Chemical Fire at Marathon Refinery [electronic resource].

Publication:

Forensic Architecture Goldsmiths, University of London The Guardian 2024

Restrictions:

Open access content

Notes:
Standard Copyright
Summary:

Marathon Petroleum Corporation’s facility in Garyville, Louisiana, is one of the largest refineries in the western hemisphere. Nearby residents of ‘fenceline’ communities, which directly border this and other facilities across Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley,’ are forced to breathe some of the most toxic air in the US; the cancer risk for local residents is seven times the U.S. national average. On 24 August 2023, a tank at the Marathon facility containing naphtha—a volatile hydrocarbon chemical mixture—began leaking, and 3.76 million kg (8.3 million lbs) of toxic flammable material was released, amounting to the second largest chemical spill in thirty years, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). For two days, residents of nearby communities and local reporters documented the growth and movement of a thick, black chemical plume; satellite images showed it stretching over 96km (60 miles). Yet even as residents reported severe health impacts, including several hospitalisations, state and corporate officials consistently claimed that there were no impacts beyond Marathon’s property line. With the Guardian, we interviewed seventeen residents of the fenceline communities that border Marathon’s property. Drawing from these testimonies and a wide range of open source materials, we constructed a 3D model of the refinery site and smoke plume. We also worked with collaborators at Imperial College London to develop a fluid dynamics simulation of the plume and its chemical components, mapping their movement and density within our model to evaluate the potential health impacts of the incident. To make visible the inconsistencies and gaps in authorities’ reporting, these different elements were then incorporated into a narrative platform designed to track and compare evidence of the incident’s development, accounts from residents, and the state’s response over time.
https://www.librarystack.org/chemical-fire-at-marathon-refinery/?ref=unknown

Resources:
Item Resolution URL
Subject:

Space (Architecture)
Cartography
Ecology
Racism
Remote-sensing images

Form/genre:

Text

Added entries:

Forensic Architecture
Imani Jacqueline Brown
Andra Pop-Jurj
Samaneh Moafi
Joshua Richards
Peter Polack
Natalia Sliwinska
Elizabeth Breiner
Lucia Rebolino
Nour Abuzaid
Davide Piscitelli
Kishan San
Lola Conte
Robert Trafford
Isabella Parlamis

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