WILD FACTS SERIES: North Pacific Gyre
A patch of garbage dubbed the Great Pacific Garbage Patch floats in the middle of the Pacific Ocean in North Pacific Gyre. Depending on the source, the size estimate of the patch varies from the size of Texas to twice as large as the continental United States.
- About 46,000 pieces of plastic float on each square mile of sea (Source: telegraph.co.uk)
- Researcher Dr Marcus Eriksen believes the Great Pacific Garbage Patch stretches from about 500 nautical miles off the coast of California, across the Northern Pacific to near the coast of Japan.
- According to the Independent newspaper 100 million tons of plastic garbage float in the North Pacific Gyre.
The North Pacific Gyre (top, center)is one of five major oceanic gyres. (Image Credit: NOAA)
Following are links to a series of short videos by VBS.TV.
- Episode #1. Searching out the Pacific Ocean’s mythical floating trash heap.
- Episode #2. The ORV Alguita casts off for the middle of nowhere.
- Episode #3. The Captain nets a moon jellyfish, nature’s plastic bag.
Marine debris on the Hawaiian coast (Image Credit: NOAA)
Related Links:
- Oceans, Where Life Started, Are Dying – Part III
- Oceans, Where Life Started, Are Dying – Part II
- Oceans, Where Life Started, Are Dying – Part I
An Interesting animation of how the garbage entering the ocean is caught by the gyre.
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