The Baffin Island Oil Spill (BIOS) Project is a long-term monitoring field study conducted in the early 1980s, seeking to examine the physical and chemical fate of crude oil released into a pristine Arctic setting. During the present study, sites of the BIOS Project were revisited in 2019 for the collection of oiled intertidal and backshore sediments. These samples were analyzed for several groups of petroleum hydrocarbons including saturates (n-alkanes, branched alkanes, and alkylcycloalkanes), hopane and sterane biomarkers, and alkylbenzenes. These hydrocarbon groups were present in concentrations ranging from 1.77–1210, 0.224–51.7, 0.0643–16.9, 0.00–11.7, and 0.0171–8.60 mg/kg within individual samples, respectively. When comparing current to limited results from past BIOS studies, a representative branched alkane (phytane), and medium-chain (nC18) and long-chain (nC30) n-alkanes demonstrate extensive weathering processes, exhibiting up to 90 %, 98 %, and 77 % loss since the penultimate BIOS revisitation in 2001, respectively.