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Gallery: Another Giant Garbage Patch F...

 

If you thought the Great Pacific Garbage Patch was a nightmare, things just got worse — it has a twin. As Plastiki makes its way across the Pacific to raise awareness about plastic in the oceans, scientists have found a matching patch in the Atlantic Ocean that stretches for thousands of square miles. The news doesn’t stop there — scientists warn the phenomenon is likely to exist in still more places around the globe.

The Atlantic patch was found by the Five Gyres Project hiding in a remote area of the ocean between Bermuda and Portugal’s mid-Atlantic Azores islands. Like the Pacific patch, it consists of tiny particles of plastic floating just beneath the ocean’s surface brought there by a vortex of currents. The patch also has larger debris composed mostly of plastic bottles entangled in seaweed — the researchers even caught a live trigger fish caught inside a plastic bucket.

As disheartening as this news is, perhaps it will help us all loosen our grip on plastic consumption and throw-away products. More garbage patches are likely to be found and we’ve not a clue as how to clean them up. The only action we have is prevention. It seems one giant floating trash bin in the Pacific wasn’t enough to smack people into their senses but maybe the uncovering of it’s sister will help.

Via The Associated Press

5 Responses to “Another Giant Garbage Patch Found in the Atlantic Ocean”

  1. Sallie Trout Sallie Trout says:

    The particulate in the ocean breaks down so that it is so fine, it can’t just be scooped up. I believe it is working like a giant swimming pool cover and heating the oceans. I think the larger pieces must be ‘harvested’ before they breakdown and the influx of additional material stopped. What organization or gov. agency is or can work on this? Where to go from here constructively?

  2. concerned concerned says:

    Why not build a floating ‘free trade’ port where ships/people can trade, shop (cant stop ‘em so might as well keep the plastics journey shorter) and refuel… then use plasma furnaces to convert the constant influx of garbage into gas/oil and landmass filler. With solar you’ll have enough power options to run desal so you can clean up the mess and make some cash without the transport costs to the producer.

  3. [...] place for designers and fabricators to look when they are considering more natural alternatives to non biodegradable, unsustainable [...]

  4. Jim Ison Jim Ison says:

    people aren’t going to stop throwing trash in the ocean, so let’s get started cleaning it up

  5. [...] Sea, the Pacific Ocean, and the Baltic Sea to collect plastic trash. A large assortment of plastic trash was sorted and crafted to create the front plastic panel of a limited edition of the Ultra One [...]

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