New Oil Spill Clean Up Method, Guess What?

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  • čas přidán 8. 04. 2024
  • Visit brilliant.org/scishow/ to get started learning STEM for free. The first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription and a 30-day free trial.
    There are many conventional ways to treat oil spills, both at sea and on land, but some of the strangest include human hair and chicken manure.
    Hosted by: Stefan Chin (he/him)
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    Sources:
    doi.org/10.5897/AJEST2019.2669
    webharvest.gov/peth04/2004101...
    doi.org/10.3390/environments7...
    doi.org/10.14719/pst.2019.6.4...
    www.sciencedaily.com/releases...
    www.noaa.gov/education/resour...
    doi.org/10.3390%2Fmolecules25...
    response.restoration.noaa.gov...
    doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.201...
    time.com/6262631/philippines-...
    www.theguardian.com/environme...
    matteroftrust.org/clean-wave-...
    doi.org/10.3390/pr10061224
    Image Sources
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/ph...
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    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/ph...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/ph...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/ph...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/ph...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
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    www.gettyimages.com/detail/ph...
    www.gettyimages.com/detail/vi...
    commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...

Komentáře • 293

  • @SciShow
    @SciShow  Před měsícem +13

    Visit brilliant.org/scishow/ to get started learning STEM for free. The first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription and a 30-day free trial.

    • @josephvanname3377
      @josephvanname3377 Před měsícem +2

      But does Brilliant have a course on reversible computation?

  • @markadams7046
    @markadams7046 Před měsícem +399

    It was a barber who came up with the idea of using human hair to clean up oil. I remember seeing a news story about it on one of the major networks years ago.

    • @davinbrown3072
      @davinbrown3072 Před měsícem +16

      Same thing Dude this is the first time in a while. I’ve seen scishow late to the party.

    • @markadams7046
      @markadams7046 Před měsícem

      I wouldn't say they are late to show. Not everything that they talk about has to be so recent, and since they are talking about a range of various types of oil clean up, the ideas didn't all come up at the same time.@@davinbrown3072

    • @korbindallas4552
      @korbindallas4552 Před měsícem +2

      Did this guy keep a bucket of hair in his garage for oil spills?

    • @markadams7046
      @markadams7046 Před měsícem

      He was barber and while watching news of an oil spill, he noticed like otters and such who swam in the oil getting all that oil in their hair, so he thought he could put the hair from his shop to good use. He experimented by getting a kiddie pool and putting oil and water in it. He then put hair in nylon stockings and tied the stockings together and put it in the pool to see if would absorb the oil. He then pitched the idea to some university I think (can't remember).@@korbindallas4552

    • @anthonywolf943
      @anthonywolf943 Před měsícem

      I've seen them in use!

  • @chris2746
    @chris2746 Před měsícem +144

    ABsortion vs ADsorption might be confusing verbally, but makes sense if you think of adsorption as a portmanteu of adhere and sorption

    • @CWorgen5732
      @CWorgen5732 Před měsícem +3

      Like your adductor and adductor muscles.

    • @YEs69th420
      @YEs69th420 Před měsícem

      @@CWorgen5732 Maybe try that one again

    • @TheTyutyu3
      @TheTyutyu3 Před měsícem +4

      That makes sense for the ad but not so much for the ab unless I'm not understanding

    • @marcuswillbrandt5901
      @marcuswillbrandt5901 Před měsícem +19

      ​@@TheTyutyu3Because it's wrong. Both cone from latin, "adsorbere" to pull something to you and "absorbere" to swallow something

    • @davemi00
      @davemi00 Před měsícem

      Tornado Warning vs Tornado Alert 🤔?

  • @medusianAllure
    @medusianAllure Před měsícem +116

    Small correction/addition: peat moss is the semi-fossilized stuff dug up from under bogs. It's very unsustainable. Sphagnum moss is the live plant that turns into peat moss when it dies and decomposes in a bog.

    • @juliabosse14jb
      @juliabosse14jb Před měsícem +4

      Peat moss is just dried peat that is mainly composed of sphagnum and it's sourced from bogs because sphagnum moss is a keystone species for bogs. To fossilize it would need to be trapped under layers of sediment for about 60 million years, slowly turning into lignite. But yes draining peatlands to harvest peat is a big no no

    • @BreadCancer
      @BreadCancer Před měsícem +4

      It's not partially fossilized, it's partially decomposed. Over time with pressure, peat eventually turns into lignite, which is the lowest grade of coal. But that is a different process from fossilization, where the organic material is replace by mineral over time.
      Natural peat is an unsustainable fuel source due to its low accumulation rate. However "peat moss" as a term can mean both sphagnum moss, or peat composed of sphagnum moss.

    • @juliabosse14jb
      @juliabosse14jb Před měsícem +1

      @@BreadCancer you explained that so much better than I could have. Thank you! Are you in geosciences by any chance? I've been taking a few geol classes but my major is environmental sciences... I'm debating switching over so if you have any advice I'd love to hear it!

  • @jase_allen
    @jase_allen Před měsícem +154

    I heard about the hair idea way back when the Deepwater Horizon oil spill was being cleaned up in the Golf of Mexico going on 15 years ago. But by the time I had heard about it, the organization that was collecting hair had said they already had too much and stopped accepting more for a while.

    • @omatic_opulis9876
      @omatic_opulis9876 Před měsícem +11

      golf⛳

    • @willythemailboy2
      @willythemailboy2 Před měsícem +14

      I know my barber was collecting garbage bags full of floor sweepings at the time. Clippings are much better than long hair as they have more surface area.

    • @jase_allen
      @jase_allen Před měsícem

      @@omatic_opulis9876 I have ADHD and dyslexia among other things. Be grateful my comments are as readable as they are.

    • @PBurns-ng3gw
      @PBurns-ng3gw Před měsícem +5

      The Golf of Mexico is the name of a semi-racist mini golf course in South Carolina

    • @EggplantHarmesan
      @EggplantHarmesan Před měsícem +4

      @@PBurns-ng3gw Bet im going

  • @gergsmail01
    @gergsmail01 Před měsícem +59

    If hair works, would feathers work? I've seen what waterfowl look like after swimming through oil spills... maybe make feather dragnets?

    • @BloodAsp
      @BloodAsp Před měsícem

      Perdu got you on a scholarship yet?

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před měsícem +14

      I'm also wondering about sheep's wool that isn't good enough to be used for clothes.
      @@BloodAsp Chicken slaughteries have a lot of leftover feathers as byproduct, I'd imagine. So why not do something with those?

    • @BloodAsp
      @BloodAsp Před měsícem

      @@rolfs2165 to be clear, it was a compliment. Perdu farms chickens. They would stand to profit from this.

    • @ten-hx2xi
      @ten-hx2xi Před měsícem +8

      @@rolfs2165i think the lanolin in sheeps wool might mess w the ocean, plus sheep wool unless its cleaned is actually pretty oilly near the sheep skin, this is why we sheer em since they dont have mountains to rub out on to sheer themselves, otherwise theyd get rashes, but maybe youre right! the already treated stuff thats scrap, or even maybe scrap clothing? good idea ❤

    • @garyhenderson7334
      @garyhenderson7334 Před měsícem +3

      Those seabirds do seem to soak up some oil.

  • @AlexirLife
    @AlexirLife Před měsícem +8

    You forgot the mushrooms!!!!
    Paul Stamets demonstrated the use of fungi to clean up land based oil spills!!!
    I remember an Australian show about 20 yrs ago called The New Inventors that did what was on the label. They had a guy on there making hair booms for oil spills. Certainly not a new idea

  • @TheStudioChibi
    @TheStudioChibi Před měsícem +6

    Learned new things about the peat moss and chicken poop but it was very funny to have the human hair mats phrased as a new thing when every salon I've gone to in the last decade sent off their hair for this.

  • @lirachonyr
    @lirachonyr Před měsícem +41

    Why did the chicken cross the road? To poop on the oil spill and save the environment!

    • @Welsh7133
      @Welsh7133 Před měsícem

      Real swell of that chicken, I tell ya

  • @ravioliis_
    @ravioliis_ Před měsícem +17

    been loving the new backgrounds recently. fun and pleasing to look at but not distracting

  • @alfamaize
    @alfamaize Před měsícem +49

    If there are microbes in chicken poop that consumes hydrocarbons, has anyone tried to use it to decompose (safely) plastic? Even if it takes a long time, it needs to be done.

    • @pheart2381
      @pheart2381 Před měsícem +2

      But would ingesting liquid plastic rather than microplastic be less harmful? Liquid plastic ingredients might even pass into organs that microplastic cant due to its molecular size.

    • @salemsaberhagan
      @salemsaberhagan Před měsícem +9

      ​@@pheart2381they're not suggesting that we feed plastic to chicken. They're suggesting we try to bury it in chicken poop.

    • @feuerling
      @feuerling Před měsícem +4

      For certain plastics we have already found microbes/enzymes that digest them, it's just a problem of scale and cost.
      Some examples: Wax worm enzymes can break down polyethylene, and mealworms styrofoam.
      There's an artificial strain of e. coli that breaks down PET, and a different microbe that can digest nylon.
      And some fungi that eat polypropylene.

    • @feuerling
      @feuerling Před měsícem +2

      ​@@pheart2381 the plastic would be broken down and recycled in dedicated facilities, not out in a field where it ends up in food and water.

    • @theninja4137
      @theninja4137 Před měsícem +2

      ​@feuerling I think you covered a thing that is easy to forget about if you're not (professionally or as a hobby) particularly interested in materials: plastic is not equal to plastic.
      Plastic materials that look essentially identical can have very different recycling methods, pollutants during manufacturing, environmental dangers if improperly disposed, ...
      I couldn't visually tell a PE yoghurt cup from a PS one, but as far as I know it makes a big difference in recyclability, so I look up any new brand I try and try to avoid PS ones

  • @TiredMomma
    @TiredMomma Před měsícem +5

    On an epidsode with Mike Rowe, he visited a hair museum in Kansas City, Missouri.
    It was because of that epidsode I later learned about someone else, collects donated hair to help with oil spills, and did try to help with that one big oil spill in the Gulf.
    But yes, the issue was on how to collect the hair as it begins to sink.

    • @freedomcat
      @freedomcat Před měsícem

      booms with floatation devices. Check every day and replace as needed.

  • @nicksamek12
    @nicksamek12 Před měsícem +26

    Thanks Tangents for the scishow episode idea!

    • @soulsbourne
      @soulsbourne Před měsícem

      Yeah... Tell that to the vegans

    • @mayaenglish5424
      @mayaenglish5424 Před měsícem

      ​@@soulsbourne Using Human hair would be vegan. It shouldn't be THAT difficult to organize some sort of collection agency for castoffs from barber shops/ salons.

  • @bobthegoat7090
    @bobthegoat7090 Před měsícem +6

    A clarification: A boom seems more like containment than actual cleaning. Right?

  • @jeffreywickens3379
    @jeffreywickens3379 Před měsícem +14

    What about feathers from poultry processing plants, and wool from sheep?

    • @TiggerIsMyCat
      @TiggerIsMyCat Před měsícem +3

      I think sheep wool is already naturally kind of oily? So maybe it would be able to pick up less?

    • @lakealin
      @lakealin Před měsícem

      I was gonna suggest fast fashion!

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před měsícem +4

      @@TiggerIsMyCat You can wash it out. Lanolin (wool fat) is actually used in pharmaceutical cremes and such. That's also why wool clothes need special detergents that add back some lanolin.

    • @asmith8692
      @asmith8692 Před měsícem +3

      Not mention that under belly wool isn't used for spinning. I believe that under chin wool also isn't used for spinning due to length. There are companies that use wool waste to create blown insulation that is more efficient than fiberglass insulation. And for anyone wondering, wool is naturally fire retardant. My sister was researching this when replacing the insulation in the attic.

    • @theninja4137
      @theninja4137 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@asmith8692 fire retardant - that's why my campfire blanket is 100% wool. Don't feel like turning into a flaming ball of polyester if a spark flies the wrong way

  • @zelousfoxtrot3390
    @zelousfoxtrot3390 Před měsícem +2

    Every hair salon should have a 'recycle' bucket to collect hair for this. Make the oil companies pay for shipping.

  • @Berkana
    @Berkana Před měsícem +7

    Does it have to be human hair? How about fur shed from huskies and golden retrievers? I contend that if there were collections for the fur of these animals, we could get a lot more of it a lot faster.

  • @curtismmichaels
    @curtismmichaels Před měsícem +23

    I never thought calling a process chicken sh*t would be a good thing.

    • @greatguyboy
      @greatguyboy Před měsícem +1

      Isn’t the joke chicken but

    • @Kaiclysm
      @Kaiclysm Před měsícem +3

      It’s supposed to be, “Guess what? chicken butt!”

  • @Rubrickety
    @Rubrickety Před měsícem +2

    Immediately after watching this video I shaved my head and replaced my hair with a combination of peat moss and chicken poop. It's possible I missed the point.

  • @Icy-Freezer160
    @Icy-Freezer160 Před měsícem +91

    now give us methods to spill oil

    • @FrankBoston
      @FrankBoston Před měsícem +9

      Can of oil + foot

    • @Randy-Lahey
      @Randy-Lahey Před měsícem +5

      Ship

    • @GGray.
      @GGray. Před měsícem +25

      Oil companies already got that covered, no need to worry about it.

    • @josephkehler5241
      @josephkehler5241 Před měsícem +3

      There's an interesting Video by tom scott about fish oil And tides

    • @princessbitch96
      @princessbitch96 Před měsícem +7

      Step one: Trust BP

  • @Andrea-kx1mj
    @Andrea-kx1mj Před měsícem +4

    Milkweed, the plant that mornarch eat is a great oil spill cleaner.

    • @TimeSurfer206
      @TimeSurfer206 Před měsícem +1

      Thank you for reminding me I need to buy some seeds.

  • @daphnereal3129
    @daphnereal3129 Před měsícem +6

    That icon transported me back to middle school 😂

  • @Aaa-dv3oi
    @Aaa-dv3oi Před měsícem

    I feel proud to say that I already knew this!😁😁 but I love sci show videos anyway

  • @LinguisticG4m3rBoi_qy1yn
    @LinguisticG4m3rBoi_qy1yn Před měsícem

    Yay New Video!

  • @exosproudmamabear558
    @exosproudmamabear558 Před měsícem +2

    There is a saying in Turkish usually to ungrateful husbands or children. I made my hair a broom for you. Now we can do it literrally.

    • @TaLeng2023
      @TaLeng2023 Před měsícem

      Your comment reminded me of Fantine from Les Miserables. She cut off her hair to make it into sweater for her daughter.

  • @grassfolk
    @grassfolk Před měsícem +1

    It’s funny when you spot a change of thumbnail

  • @lanamarie8861
    @lanamarie8861 Před měsícem +1

    Does coco coir work well too, instead of peat moss? More sustainable

  • @bbbenj
    @bbbenj Před měsícem

    Thanks...

  • @galenanightfire
    @galenanightfire Před měsícem

    What about Coconut Coir (the kind that is used in composting toilets). It’s pretty absorbent! But it may also absorb water just like peat moss.

  • @Generic42
    @Generic42 Před 21 dnem +1

    I’ve been using Cherokee hair tampons for years

  • @General12th
    @General12th Před měsícem

    Hi Stefan!

  • @nebimik9930
    @nebimik9930 Před měsícem +1

    Hello. I'm doing a graduate work on this theme (cleaning oil spills ;)

  • @ethannunya3285
    @ethannunya3285 Před měsícem

    I like the new set

  • @HunniebeeGames
    @HunniebeeGames Před měsícem +1

    I have been wondering how/where I can donate my hair specifically for oil spills for a while now. Any organizations in Canada?

  • @plat6164
    @plat6164 Před měsícem

    Great thumbnail humor

  • @stevey_z
    @stevey_z Před měsícem

    Best method to use and spill less oil

  • @annekabrimhall1059
    @annekabrimhall1059 Před měsícem +9

    This has been available for a decade. The reason it’s not used is because nobody makes money selling it, like when you sell plastic booms! Saying that the hair might sink is an excuse! Often they add chemicals to force the oil to sink to the bottom to contain it.

    • @lc.rr.ss.23
      @lc.rr.ss.23 Před měsícem +4

      Agreed, if hair sinks and peat moss floats, and they both clean the water, why not weave it together or something! They could make matts with hair, moss, and like someone else suggested feathers. That's too simple though, and renewable, and wayy better for the environment!! And the rich get keep getting richer...

    • @jessicagalvin4598
      @jessicagalvin4598 Před měsícem +1

      I think it’s lesser known because of corporate greed. Those shady oil companies cause a spill through negligence and they get a monopoly on fixing it.

  • @toneyaperven
    @toneyaperven Před měsícem

    yes

  • @davemi00
    @davemi00 Před měsícem

    Rapunzel, Rapunzel we need you

  • @anna9072
    @anna9072 Před měsícem

    I know I’ve used wool to clean up small oil spills on my property. And while quite a lot of human hair probably goes to waste and could be used for this, there’s far more wool that goes to waste every year. Sheep HAVE to be shorn every year, producing anywhere from 3-14 pounds each, and a lot of this just goes to waste.

  • @mathewwright4129
    @mathewwright4129 Před měsícem

    Nice.

  • @haydenshaw627
    @haydenshaw627 Před měsícem

    I've seen a commercial way back about Native American hair and how it's so absorbent.

  • @MagicOfDark
    @MagicOfDark Před měsícem

    I saw the thumbnail and I thought, "throw all the chickens into the ocean to soak up the oil? I know that can't be right"

  • @NailahRoberts
    @NailahRoberts Před měsícem

    What about torrefied straw pellets?

  • @margaretford1011
    @margaretford1011 Před měsícem

    I once lived in an area that was experimenting with using chicken poop as a farm fertilizer. WORST STENCH EVER.

  • @hollywooddied666
    @hollywooddied666 Před 22 dny

    Interested in knowing what you call synthetic clean up of oilspill?

  • @Nerdorkgeek
    @Nerdorkgeek Před měsícem

    Ayyy I remember this Tangents fact

  • @lh3540
    @lh3540 Před měsícem +1

    Based on my floors, vacuum, and drains, I seem to be capable of producing and endless amount of 3' long hair. What is their asking price

  • @officialxokfanaccount4774
    @officialxokfanaccount4774 Před měsícem

    hellooooo, just here to say matter of trust has locations all over the world and donations can even be picked up near your house!!

  • @kiyoshikusama4178
    @kiyoshikusama4178 Před měsícem

    What about mycoremediation for terrestrial oil spills?

  • @daniellemurphy9755
    @daniellemurphy9755 Před měsícem

    There is a company that already does the hair mat thing.

  • @MaFritz101
    @MaFritz101 Před měsícem

    Can the hair and peat methods be combined to increase efficiency?

  • @ecurps1
    @ecurps1 Před měsícem

    Then combine hair nets with boom floats. And hire some people with textile experience to trouble-shoot the weaving and texture viability. Just because a type of hair isn't that good at adsorption doesn't mean it can't be used in mats that absorb instead.

  • @purpleghost106
    @purpleghost106 Před měsícem

    Worth reminind everyone that even the most cleaning we can manage still leaves a LOT of damage. Birds that even get touched by oil will be toxified (cleaned birds usually die within a month)
    Peat moss bogs are one of the best carbon sinks we have, so if we have to pick, def go human hair. But please, let's try to speed transitioning off oil ASAP

  • @KisekiGamer1
    @KisekiGamer1 Před měsícem

    Dish soap works wonders as well

    • @crisfer22
      @crisfer22 Před měsícem +1

      I wouldn't try that in the ocean

  • @KreigsMarine2
    @KreigsMarine2 Před měsícem

    So what happens to the oily hair after that? Where does that go?

  • @Tfin
    @Tfin Před měsícem

    Hi! I'm here to throw off your experiment's data collection!
    When I clicked on this video and added it to my "Watch Later" list, it was "chicken butt." I am now watching it when it is "wet hair woman." Neither thumbnail had any influence on my choice to watch this video. I am subscribed and watch most of your videos, generally ignoring only the ones which are compilations.

  • @user-jm9iw6mm9o
    @user-jm9iw6mm9o Před měsícem

    Yea

  • @aroundandround
    @aroundandround Před měsícem

    At the beginning of the video, I thought the thumbnail was pointing to chicken’s feathers to use them like hair.

  • @aureusyarara
    @aureusyarara Před měsícem +1

    IS THERE ANYTHING THE HUMBLE CHICKEN CANNOT IMPROVE??

  • @ivytarablair
    @ivytarablair Před měsícem

    TIME FOR THE STRATEGIC HAIR RESERVE CAVE.

  • @HaloHighlightz
    @HaloHighlightz Před měsícem

    0:17 I read the title but I literally thought that was a painting until I noticed the grass (currently redecorating 😅)

  • @klocugh12
    @klocugh12 Před měsícem

    Someone: You are chickens***
    Me: at least I can clean up oil spills then.

  • @alanlarsen3525
    @alanlarsen3525 Před měsícem

    Chicken butt thumbnail was better, sister and I lold

  • @snackplissken8192
    @snackplissken8192 Před měsícem

    I hear Lindsey Graham may have predated SciShow in advocating that environmentalists put their heads into an oil spill, but I suspect that may have just been a colorful southern metaphor on his part.

  • @bglrj
    @bglrj Před měsícem +1

    If I miss a day shampooing, I prove this hypothesis.

  • @Mantades
    @Mantades Před měsícem

    I tried to google it but it just gets more confusing. On one hand hair absorb water (up to 30%), on the other hand hair are hydrophobic. So if I understand it correctly, unwashed hair have a thin protective layer that makes them hydrophobic to some extent, but when you wash them, the layer disappears and hair take water in.
    Though it still doesn't seem to explain why rain droplets actually soak in, rather then slip down the hair and fall down without leaving any wet spots.
    What is with the hair and water relationship? Can someone explain it?

    • @crisfer22
      @crisfer22 Před měsícem

      There is a lot of variability depending on how open the cuticle is (from damage or just naturally) and I think time in contact with water might also be a factor, so the longer it is the more it swells and that opens the cuticle too. So dry undamaged hair is pretty hydrophobic, wet damaged hair not so much.

  • @marksteers3424
    @marksteers3424 Před měsícem

    Birds - particularly sea birds - seem to soak up a lot of oil when they are victims of an oil spillage. Could we not use feathers in the same way as human hair?

  • @pinkace
    @pinkace Před měsícem

    Chicken poop! Never would've imagined!

  • @AlexKiritz
    @AlexKiritz Před měsícem

    Peat moss has tripled in price at Home Depot and Lowe’s just over the past two years.

  • @skittlesryan7862
    @skittlesryan7862 Před měsícem

    I wonder if human hair is better at picking up oil than cat litter. This might need experimentation.

  • @Charlesbakowski
    @Charlesbakowski Před měsícem

    My beard could take Exxon-Valdez to task.

  • @VinnieG-
    @VinnieG- Před měsícem

    My hair Could clean it up but I'm not the one who caused the leak. That's the crazy super duper ultra rich oil people

  • @lhinarizona6658
    @lhinarizona6658 Před měsícem

    I liked the south side of a north bound chicken shot better. :P

  • @Jansie_NL
    @Jansie_NL Před měsícem

    Ah! I always wondered how it was possible for fatty hair conditioner to actually stick to the hair when it's all wet and oil-free from the shampoo.

  • @buidelrat132
    @buidelrat132 Před měsícem

    Bird feathers soak up oil pretty well too for similar reasons. 😈

  • @bobthegoat7090
    @bobthegoat7090 Před měsícem

    I don't see why you compare hair floats to booms. Isn't booms a containment system, while the hair floats is a collection method? So, don't they have to be used together anyway?

  • @willowfuhrman708
    @willowfuhrman708 Před měsícem

    I’ll take the thumbnail as the answer

  • @runkelpokk9
    @runkelpokk9 Před měsícem

    so how much hair do you need to clean up 800k liters of oil spilled into the sea?

  • @nenaj8053
    @nenaj8053 Před měsícem

    Rubbing hair in your eye - after it has gotten 🌶️ in it - will remove the chili oil from the eye too!

  • @fourcatsandagarden
    @fourcatsandagarden Před měsícem

    Pet hair can help too - i know of a plce that takes hair donations to make mats

  • @erikarussell1142
    @erikarussell1142 Před měsícem

    Now I want a way to send some scientists my hair. I have past bum length hair when I’m 5’10”. I release soooo much hair. Let me help!!! Lol

  • @JosephKeenanisme
    @JosephKeenanisme Před měsícem

    mycelium aka mushrooms for sills on land.

  • @lynnrolaf7422
    @lynnrolaf7422 Před měsícem

    I wonder if we can convert dog hair into the same thing since some breeds shed so much ❤

  • @shaxplosion
    @shaxplosion Před měsícem

    My hair isn't greasy I just cleaned up an oil spill

  • @Volundur9567
    @Volundur9567 Před měsícem

    I heard that rejected hair donations (they don't get accepted for wigs) go to cleaning oil spills.

  • @TheSuzberry
    @TheSuzberry Před měsícem +6

    What about wool that is unsuitable for garments?

  • @coffeediction
    @coffeediction Před měsícem

    dang what happened to sound? its so scratchy and "painful" xD Had to drop the volume to 1% or so to have it bearable. Others are fine, but this one's weird, its like it misses all the bass.

  • @outdoorsy01
    @outdoorsy01 Před měsícem

    This was a thing years ago...

  • @xpndblhero5170
    @xpndblhero5170 Před měsícem

    Guaranteed there's an "activist" walking around w/ really long dreads soaked in oil at protests..... 😂

  • @05Matz
    @05Matz Před měsícem

    Peat moss is a fossil product (made by nature through geological processes converting biological matter far slower than it's already being used) generally taken from delicate ecosystems, so human hair sounds like a better avenue. Save the peat for where we don't have good alternatives.
    Still, however we clean up the negligent releases, the liability of all these risks and costs has to be shifted from society as a whole onto the ones profiting from oil extraction. Not just the occasional spill cleanup operations, but the evacuations, the lost biodiversity, the infrastructure that needs to be set up to respond to these events, the 'regular' ongoing climate change, the air pollution, all of it. We can't keep letting companies outsource their negative externalities onto everyone else. Even if you don't care about the environment or public health, that's somebody else using a distorted position in the market to divert money out of your pocket and into theirs by forcing you to pay for the consequences of their business practices. Everybody should agree that's bad. The basis of even the most hardcore 'free market' economics relies on the strict assumption that that doesn't happen (more realistic models on the explicit notion that it "wouldn't be allowed to happen" by the government), the math they use to declare their system 'optimal' explicitly doesn't balance if it it's possible to do that (or for your business decisions to provide an uncompensated benefit to a third party eg. by building beautiful buildings instead of cheaper ugly ones, but that's another issue)!

  • @ruud9767
    @ruud9767 Před měsícem

    Chicken feathers - we have lots of those.

  • @jeaniebird999
    @jeaniebird999 Před měsícem

    (Me, viewing the thumbnail): chicken butt? 🤔

  • @sharonpreston2826
    @sharonpreston2826 Před měsícem

    Problem with peat moss is it's not a renewable product.

  • @ceasinghornet40d40
    @ceasinghornet40d40 Před měsícem

    my hair would probably cause oil spills, it's so greasy

  • @SabethRavenwing
    @SabethRavenwing Před měsícem

    I wonder if anyone has tried to use bird feathers? Duck and goose would likely work best but they have value, but maybe chicken feathers as a meat byproduct?

  • @ginnyjollykidd
    @ginnyjollykidd Před měsícem

    Off these, only the chicken poop was explained in how it processes hydrocarbons to completion. I was hoping you would say how the contaminated hair would be processed. Like that it would be sent to be processed by other innovative methods.
    Yes, chicken poop would be a good source to process the oil cleanup. Yes, researching other poops woulds be worth looking into.
    I'd start with cow poop. Now why is it that cows are our supposed greatest greenhouse gas releaser? Methane? Find out what Microflora are involved in that.
    Pigs.
    How about geese and other fowl? Bats?
    But I'd first check out pigs and cows because they poop so much. But chickens are a good idea because of all the chickens we farm and eat.
    What to do with all the chicken poop? Put it in with earthworms: red wiggler compost worms and nightcrawlers which aerate soil. Stuff that red wigglers eat becomes pathogen-free and makes black gold "magic" compost for gardens.
    Next, see if organisms shown to eat plastic will work on sopped - up oil spills. Like mealworms and wax moth grubs.
    Most important, though, is to make sure the organisms that eat oil and plastic truly return usable, food-worthy nutrients to the spil.
    For that matter, have humans developed any microflora that reduce the plastics in our system? I.e.,should we have more plastic in us than is found?

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před měsícem

      Well, even if the oil-soaked hair can only be burned, you could still get electricity and heat out of that to use.

  • @yellowflowerorangeflower5706

    Cool

  • @bensoncheung2801
    @bensoncheung2801 Před měsícem

    👍👍👍

  • @ilessthan3bees
    @ilessthan3bees Před měsícem

    Did you make a "guess what, chicken butt" joke?