Great Pacific Garbage Patch: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

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The Great Pacific Garbage Patch:

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, also known as the Pacific trash vortex, is a collection of litter which has ended up in oceans, seas and other large bodies of water. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch spans from the West Coast of America to Japan. These areas are linked together by the North Pacific Subtropical Convergence Zone; this convergence zone acts as a highway for litter to move from one patch to another. It has also been theorised that the ocean floor beneath the Great pacific garbage patch is also littered with a lot of rubbish on its own. This is a valid theory because it has been proven by Oceanographers and Ecologists that 70% of marine debris actually sinks down to the ocean floor. Although the scientists have researched this garbage vortex, they did not find it. However, when the founder of this garbage vortex, Charles Moore, was boat racing, he found this garbage vortex while he was travelling from Hawaii to California. He and his crew members noticed that their ship was surrounded by millions of …show more content…

The large amount of cigarette butts is due to people smoking at the back of the club and on the beach in their free time. Since smoking is not allowed in the club all the smokers would smoke behind the club and all the cigarette butts would be littered where the smokers are smoking. All the pieces of plastic could be from the boats from the yacht club or from beach toys that kids would play on the beach. The large decline in the amount of rubbish found daily could be due to the beach being barely used in that time due to the weather which does not attract people to beaches. The reason the first day had much more was probably because that rubbish could have been building up for ages and not been picked

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