Scientists caution that doesn't mean the crude is gone. There's still a lot of it in the Gulf, though no one is sure quite how much or exactly where it is.
"You know it didn't just disappear," said Ernst Peebles, a biological oceanographer at the University of South Florida. "We expect that is has been dispersed pretty far by now."
Jane Lubchenco, the head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said government and independent scientists have been working hard to figure out where the oil might be, but don't yet have numbers. Some is still washing up on beaches and in coastal wetlands, but not in the quantities it was a few weeks ago.
Scientists do know that more than 600 miles of coastline has been oiled in the nearly 100 days since the April 20 explosion of the offshore oil rig Deepwater Horizon.
They estimate that between 107 million gallons and 184 million gallons spewed into the Gulf before the cap stopped the flow July 15. The permanent solution, using a relief well to shoot in mud and cement, is still several weeks away.
So far, officials say they have recovered 34.6 million gallons of oily water using skimmer boats and burned about 11.1 million gallons off the sea surface.
So where's the rest?
Scientists are worried that much of it has been trapped below the surface after more than 770,000 gallons of chemical dispersant were used to break up the oil a mile deep. They have found evidence of massive clouds of oil suspended in the water.
"What is down there is a smaller particle," said chemical oceanographer John Kessler from Texas A&M University. "You can't think of it as thick, nasty crude."
Kessler sampled the waters around the broken well and found high natural gas levels more than 3,000 feet below the surface and miles-long underwater oil plumes.
Scientists want to know how fast the oil is being eaten by microbes, how fast it is being diluted, whether it is sinking to the bottom and where it is being carried off to. Scientists say large amounts of oil trapped in the subsurface could contaminate the food chain and deplete oxygen.
Gulf Oil Spill
In this photo taken May 22, 2010, Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser tours marshes impacted by the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill in Pass a Loutre and Redfish Bay along the coast of Lousiana. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
In this photo taken June 25, 2010, Thomas and Alicia Barrios have dinner in their nearly empty restaurant , which lost most of its daily business since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill,with their children Alyssa, 10, left, and, Thomas, Jr., 18, in Golden Meadow, La. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
In this photo taken Wednesday, June 30, 3010, employee Marcelino Castillo picks up crabs from one of the few hampers they could buy at Barrios Seafood Restaurant in Golden Meadow, La. The Barrios family business has few customers since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
In this photo taken June 30,2010, relatives who arrived to eat at his family's nearly empty restaurant hug each other as out of work crab fisherman Thomas Barrios, right, watches, in Golden Meadow, La. Business ground to a standstill since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
In this photo taken June 30, 2010, with no more seafood to sell due to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, out-of-work crab fisherman Thomas Barrios removes the last batch of bait fish from his freezer from his family's seafood market in Golden Meadow, La. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
In this photo taken Wednesday, June 30, 2010, with no more seafood to sell due to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Thomas and Alicia Barrios sit in their empty seafood market in Golden Meadow, La. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
GULF OF MEXICO, LA - JULY 27: (EDITORS NOTE: Distortion caused by heat.) Ships assist in clean up and containment near the source of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill July 27, 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana. Work continues to put a permanent plug on the well which has leaked an estimated three to five million barrels of oil. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images) *** BEST PIX ***
On the day he was named chief executive officer of BP, Bob Dudley, who was raised in Mississippi, told reporters that the Gulf oil spill "is very personal to me." The longtime oil industry veteran became emotional when he said that BP would not abandon the Gulf after the well is permanently capped. (MCT)
Oil spews from a wellhead in Barataria Bay on the coast of Louisiana after it was struck by a tugboat, Tuesday, July 27, 2010. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
Oil spews from a wellhead in Barataria Bay on the coast of Louisiana after it was struck by a tugboat, Tuesday, July 27, 2010. A crew capable of capping the well is expected onsite later Tuesday. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
Lubchenco, a marine scientist, said the oil was not sinking to the bottom.
"As far as we can determine it is primarily in the water column itself, not sitting on the seafloor," Lubchenco said.
She also said the oil beneath the surface appears to be biodegrading very quickly, which she called a good sign.
Thomas Bianchi, a geochemist and oceanographer at Texas A&M University, said that because the dispersants have pushed oil underwater, scientists may be past the point where they can track it from the air.
"Now it's time to look at the molecular and microbial food web," he said. "We may be beyond people in white suits and booms."
He added: "There's no way to clean up water at that level in a large basin like the Gulf or these estuaries. You have to live with nature's ability to clean it up."
Associated Press writers Jason Dearen in San Francisco and Seth Borenstein in Washington contributed to this report.




