Look up the Sargaso sea. It is in the middle of the atlantic. It is a mass of seaweed. There is not much wind there. In the days of sailing ships, it was a place where ships that ventured there often escaped only by their crew manning the lifeboats and towing the sailing ship out with the oar driven lifeboats.
2007-10-15 15:32:19
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answer #1
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answered by naterino 3
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The largest dump in the world isn’t outside New York or London or Shanghai but in a desolate stretch of the Pacific Ocean nearly a thousand miles from the nearest island. Held together by a slowly rotating system of currents northeast of Hawaii, the Eastern Garbage Patch is more than just a few floating plastic bottles washed out to sea; the Patch is a giant mass of trash-laden water nearly double the size of Texas.
The Eastern Garbage Patch is just the most obvious manifestation of the amount of pollution filling the seas. Even though seventy percent of plastic items will eventually sink, the UNEP estimates there are 46,000 pieces of marine debris for every square mile of all the world’s oceans. Nearly four fifths of this garbage has been carried from litter on land, washed into storm drains, or floated down rivers.
Here's a map on where it is:
http://www.mindfully.org/Plastic/Ocean/Trashing-Oceans-Plastic4nov02.htm
I will try to find google earth images as well.
2007-10-15 09:45:31
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answer #2
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answered by DiCe 2
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i think of the media's use of the term "island" is deceptive. perhaps "concentration" is the greater advantageous determination. although i've got no longer seen it myself, my impresssion, in line with analyzing some articles (i replaced into curious too, to work out this "island" of trash), is that it relatively is basically floating bottles, luggage and different products, such as you will possibly locate floating interior the sea everywhere. the adaptation this is basically the concentration. there is dramatically greater trash according to sq. mile here than an standard sq. mile of ocean someplace else. so a tactics as an truthfully mass that should carry jointly into an island/raft form of ingredient, i might wager that some trash does get tangled jointly, perhaps forming a trash-island of a few sq. feet (perhaps the portion of your place's front door), yet I doubt the above-water height of this "island" might upward push over some inches. One on line article I examine predicted the trash to be a nil.5 pound each and every one hundred sq. meters interior the section (greater or less the section a house takes up), which fairly a concentration for ocean water, yet hardly what we could think of as an "island".
2016-11-08 10:11:15
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answer #3
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answered by joerling 4
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did some crazy environmentalist put you up to this? I'm sure we'd all have heard about a floating trash island the size of Texas. It doesn't exist
2007-10-15 09:44:01
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answer #4
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answered by Chris B 2
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They say that it will/already has gathered in the Pacific Ocean, northeast of Austrailia. This is where the ocean currents meet, carrying plastic bags, lost plastic shovels, and other junk. I don't think anyone has found it yet, though...
2007-10-15 09:42:08
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answer #5
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answered by Felix S 2
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Sounds like France to me. Its in Europe.
2007-10-15 09:45:13
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answer #6
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answered by Jay 4
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Gee, you'd think something that big would show up on a satellite image, wouldn't you? Texas is 261,797 square miles, which would be a circle nearly 300 miles in radius (577 square miles in diameter).
You know it is there, eh?
You can't find it because it never has existed.
This is the state of our education system today? That's it, I'm homeschooling my little ones.
2007-10-15 09:41:54
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't think that's real!? cant imagine it either......Texas is like at least six times the size of my country (England) so I can't picture it!?
2007-10-15 09:43:44
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answer #8
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answered by BlueBolt 2
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Yes they call it the isle of wight now!
2007-10-15 09:44:42
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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In the Pacific - read here! http://www.mindfully.org/Plastic/Ocean/Moore-Trashed-PacificNov03.htm
2007-10-15 09:41:42
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answer #10
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answered by Sal*UK 7
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