A leftist conspirist environmental alarmist (redundant adjectives, I know) friend of mine told me of a “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” of discarded floating plastic bottles circling the Pacific Ocean.
Supposedly, this floating garbage patch is “twice the size of Texas” and up to 300 feet deep in places.
The only references I can find to it are on OTHER environmental alarmist web sites . . . i.e., I can’t find a credible non-biased source that this GPGP exists.
This is pretty well-documented, too. Even a cursory Google search turns up articles by CNN and the New York Times, unless shallora has deemed these “leftist conspiracist environmentalist alarmist” publications as well. Which doesn’t prove much, but you don’t have to rely on fringe sites or blogs to read about this.
It really exists, but it’s not nearly as densely packed with debris as you might imagine. I’ve heard it described as an “island” of garbage, which is, well, garbage. From the Wikipedia article
The fact that the individual particles are small doesn’t mean that it’s not a problem – various critters end up consuming the plastic, which can either kill said critters or get toxins from the plastic into the food chain.
Oops - I most likely was misremembering the article in Discover (both of which we subscribe to). Just didn’t want anyone to go diving into their yellow-spined back issues and call me a liar!
I would point out that this has periodically been reported on in the regular media too, over several years. This isn’t some secret, it’s not new, it’s well-known.
It’s just that people are generally in denial about environmental damage because they feel threatened and overwhelmed, to the point that they dismiss stories like this as “non-credible alarmist bias.”
Well, when described as a “floating island of garbage” it is a bit alarmist, no? Just like if you said Palm Beach has high levels of radiation. True in a way, but not in the way people would assume you meant.
Cruising World had an article on it a couple years back. It’s not just little things floating around. The circular nature of the Pacific current tends to draw all garbage into the gyre. Balls, bags, buckets, all the way up to shipping containers. But don’t expect to pull a Jesus and walk on the water, it is too spread out for that. And since it is in an area of the Pacific known to be rather calm (the Doldrums) it takes a long time for it to break down. The problem is that the area is rich with life because for eons it was just organic matter that went there. Now those animals are eating a lot of garbage with their organic matter. Sucks to be them.
But it really shouldn’t be of any surprise to anyone that has walked along any length of undeveloped oceanfront. Garbage is everywhere.
[hijack]When I was in Kosovo, I witnessed this phenomena on a smaller scale. There was a lake that was literally half covered in plastic bottles. The pack would travel depending on which way the wind was blowing. The most disheartening thing was to see people fishing in the half that wasn’t covered by bottles. [/hijack]
I see them washed up on the beach (boaters use them for baling and floats). It seems to me that the plastic becomes brittle and breaks into pieces-does it eventually disintegrate?
I am sorry to say that this is a very real thing. Scripts Research facility sent out a group of scientists last summer to investigate the area. Their findings should be publish soon if not already. I would go to their website.
I mean flotsam is colonized by barnicles, and baricles attract fish, and fish attract birds and larger fish.
Oil rigs act as artificial reefs-so doesn’t all that floating junk have some real benefits?
Like tha sargasso Sea-it turns the desrt-like mid-ocean into productive life zones.