Thursday, November 12, 2009

Researchers Explore Growing Ocean Garbage Patches via NYTimes.com

ABOARD THE ALGUITA, 1,000 miles northeast of Hawaii — In this remote patch of the Pacific Ocean, hundreds of miles from any national boundary, the detritus of human life is collecting in a swirling current so large that it defies precise measurement.

Light bulbs, bottle caps, toothbrushes, Popsicle sticks and tiny pieces of plastic, each the size of a grain of rice, inhabit the Pacific garbage patch, an area of widely dispersed trash that doubles in size every decade and is now believed to be roughly twice the size of Texas. But one research organization estimates that the garbage now actually pervades the Pacific, though most of it is caught in what oceanographers call a gyre like this one — an area of heavy currents and slack winds that keep the trash swirling in a giant whirlpool.

I've blogged about this before, but it deserves more coverage. We're quietly building a continent of trash in the Pacific and possibly islands of trash elsewhere.

We really are a horrible, selfish species, aren't we?

Posted via web from thepete's posterous

No comments: