You may be familiar with the dreaded Great Pacific Garbage Patch — a massive soup of plastic debris, flotsam and junk floating in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Scientists say that ocean currents determine the precise gathering of the junk: the patch lies in the middle of a giant ocean gyre, or vortex in the sea. There are five major gyres in the world’s oceans, and one group, 5 Gyres, is determined to search the remaining 4 for evidence of similar plastic island gatherings.
The 5 Gyres Project Searches the Oceans for New Garbage Patches
by Moe Beitiks, 02/12/10
filed under: Water Issues
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4 Responses to “The 5 Gyres Project Searches the Oceans for New Garbage Patches”
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Thanks for providing more information about the 5 Gyres Project, and some great, albeit disturbing photos I hadn’t seen before.
I’ve written a little thing about the North Pacific Gyre at http://elizabethely.com/2010/03/22/plastic-garbage-for-the-albatross-dinner/ and have posted a slideshow video of albatross chicks who ate plastic debris. Bird after bird filled with plastic, all documented thanks to photographer Chris Jordan in September 2009 with his Midway – Message from the Gyre.
I was completely shocked when I found out about these masses of plastic floating in the ocean. I believe that the lack of coverage on the subject is one of the major problems. People dont and wont care unless something is put in their faces. Is there anything I can do.
[...] bags are used in the US — any only 7 percent of them are recycled. The plastic scourge clogs waterways and takes hundreds of years to break down into smaller plastic bits (the bags don’t [...]
Hi,
I was watching your video on YouTube about the Trash stuck in the Gyre.
You made the statement that you don’t think that it could be cleaned up.
I have been putting some thought into this dilemma and I say “It can be cleaned up” its just going to take a lot of hard work but it can be done.
Let’s talk,
Louis Howell
4816 McMahon Blvd. NW #L-100
Albuquerque, NM 87114
(505) 292-9382
Goofy13007@aol.com