Perilous Times
New giant floating garbage patch found in Atlantic Ocean
Researchers have found a high concentration of plastic debris is
floating in the Atlantic Ocean north of the Caribbean, months after
concerns were raised over a vast patch of rubbish floating in the
Pacific Ocean.
Published: 7:00AM GMT 24 Feb 2010
The Telegraph UK
The Great Pacific Garbage patch was originally discovered in 1997 by
Captain Charles Moore
The study's principal investigator said that the findings were based on
more than 64,000 tiny bits of plastic collected over more than 22 years
by Sea Education Association undergraduates.
Researchers believe surface currents carry the debris to the area
between 22 and 38 degrees north latitude and that waves also deliver
trash to a spot between Hawaii and California known as the Great
Pacific Garbage Patch.
Kara Lavendar Law, one of the researchers, said it was difficult to
compare the two, but team members in both places collected more than
1,000 pieces during a single tow of a net.
The study was conducted by researchers from SEA, the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution and the University of Hawaii.
The Great Pacific Garbage patch was originally discovered in 1997 by
Captain Charles Moore.
Roughtly the size of Texas, the patch is characterised by exceptionally
high concentrations of suspended plastic, chemical sludge, and other
debris that have been trapped by the currents of the North Pacific Gyre.
Despite its size and density, the patch is not visible from satellite
photography because it consists of very small pieces, almost invisible
to the naked eye and most of its contents are suspended beneath the
surface of the ocean.