“I was confronted, as far as the eye could see, with the sight of plastic. It seemed unbelievable, but I never found a clear spot. In the week it took to cross the subtropical high, no matter what time of day I looked, plastic debris was floating everywhere.” Moore

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One day back in 1997, [Charles Moore], on a whim, decided to take an alternate route from Hawaii to Santa Barbara. He was shocked to have found debris floating in the ocean about 1000 miles north of Hawaii and 1000 miles West of San Francisco. The more he looked, the more he found, the more he found, the more disturbed he became. Like any good human should, he sought out to do something about this atrocity, eventually founding The [Algalita Marine Research Foundation].

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What is the Garbage Patch?

The garbage patch is the world's largest landfill that has infiltrated our ocean. It consists of all sorts of trash from all over the world, 90% of it being plastic. Many people wrongly believe that it is a solid land form, but it isn't, most of it can't even been seen above the water. It is billions upon billions of tiny pieces of plastic and debris that outnumber the plankton 6:1. 6:1! So for every pound of plankton, there are six pounds of little pieces of plastic.

Where is it located?

The Garbage Patch is located in the Pacific Ocean. The Eastern Garbage Patch is located between Japan and Hawaii. The Western Garbage Patch is located between Hawaii and the US. The Western Patch is approximately twice the size of Texas. The Eastern and Western patches combined is thought to be two times the size of the continental US and is estimated to be 10 to 30 meters deep.

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Where does this garbage come from?

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Most (4/5 ths) of the marine trash comes from land, storms wash garbage off highways and city streets, down streams and rivers, and out to sea. The rest come from ships, cruise lines that illegally dump their waste, oil platforms, or fishing boats. "In addition, thousands of cargo containers fall overboard in stormy seas each year, spilling their contents. One ship heading from Los Angeles to Tacoma, Wash., disgorged 33,000 blue-and-white Nike basketball shoes in 2002. Other loads lost at sea include 34,000 hockey gloves and 29,000 yellow rubber ducks and other bathtub toys."

What kind of stuff can be found in the Garbage Patch?

Baby bottles, water bottles, fishing gear, lighters, lids, rubber ducks, netting, shampoo and conditioner bottles, laundry soap bottles, milk jugs, ab rollers, happy meal toys, beer coolers, Tupperware, Swiffers, milk crates, Astroturf, hair dryers, baby pools, buckets, toothbrushes, tampon applicators, saran wrap, plastic bags, Lego's, Velcro, credit cards, breast implants, galoshes, prosthetic limbs, Styrofoam containers, contact lenses, helmets, cutlery, pens, pantyhose, condoms, dolls, flowers, photo frames, CD and DVD cases, water guns, shoes, cups, plates, pink flamingos, silly putty, sports balls, glue sticks, air conditioners, catheters, polar fleece, garden hoses, sex toys, expandable insulation, sprinklers, eyeglasses, syringes, dental floss, beach balls, fridge doors, carrier bags of all sorts = dry cleaning, fast food, grocery, wardrobe and garbage bags, hula hoops, Plexiglas police shields, carpeting, humidifiers, car bumpers, green bins, Teflon pans, Frisbees

Why doesn't it spread to the whole ocean?

The Garbage Patch is being held in certain areas because it is caught in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre. A gyre is an area of the ocean that moves in a circular motion due to the warm tropical air that comes from the equator. This warm air starts to descend as it moves north and moves in a circular motion which creates circular ocean currents. The entire area is ~100 million square miles and is also known as the 'horse latitudes' or the 'doldrums'. The circular ocean currents tend not to mix with the surrounding ocean, so the garbage floats in and stays, forever circling and churning. All in all, globally, these gyres make up ~40% of the ocean.


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A little about plastic

Trashnami-with-trailer-park-outfront-of-window.jpg ALL Plastic is man made = we created the problem! It was only invented 146 years ago (1862) and already we are clogging the ocean. Every single piece of plastic ever made (that wasn't incinerated) is still on earth because plastic does not biodegrade, ever, it photo-degrades. To photo-degrade means that in the presence of the sun it breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces of, plastic.

Plastic Facts -Plastic lasts for 400 – 1000 years (supposedly) -We use 20 times more plastic today than we did 50 years ago -There are 60,000 plastic bags used in the US every 5 seconds -There are 2 million plastic beverage bottles used in the US every 5 minutes -Globally we produce ~200 million tons/year -Less than 3.5% of which gets recycled -Math? that’s only 7 million tons of 200 million tons that gets recycled! -On average – we throw away ~185 lbs of plastic/ person/ year -The U.N. Environment Program estimates that 46,000 pieces of plastic litter are floating on every square mile of the oceans. About 70% will eventually sink

Toxins Plastic is a toxic sponge, meaning that it soaks up all the hydrophobic chemicals around it. These tiny pieces of plastic concentrate the toxins, up to 1 million times more toxic than the surrounding water. Some of the toxins found have been: DDT, DDE, Hydrocarbons, PCB, PFOA, PBDE’s, POP’s and Bisphenol A; all of which are known carcinogens that cause: cancer, obesity, diabetes, infertility, neurological disorders among other things. We eat these toxins every time we eat from the ocean. Small fish eat these 'toxic pills', and bigger fish eat the small fish, and an even bigger fish eats that fish, so on and so forth, until it reaches our dinner table. The problem with these toxins, is that they bioaccumulate, they start out small but grow in intensity (toxicity) at every subsequent level.

Midway Island Albatross

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Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument

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