Recently, it is said that the eighth continent was formed, but this is not ordinary land, but it is completely made of artificial waste. In the Pacific Ocean between the California coast and the Hawaiian Islands, there are so-called "patch" waste consisting mainly of plastic (trans-ocean waste). This is called Great Pacific Garbage Patch, also known as Pacific Trash Vortex. Although this plaque has spread to the vast area of the North Pacific, it is not presumed to be due to changes in wind and ocean currents and the increase in debris, so its actual size is still uncertain. Great) Pacific garbage patch).
"Great Pacific Garbage Patch" is a term frequently used by media, but it does not represent an accurate depiction of the oceanic waste problem in the North Pacific. The name "Pacific Waste Patch" has made many people believe that this area is a continuous part of most of the fragile marine refuse such as bottles and other trash - seen through satellite photographs or aerial photographs It should be literally Junk Island. It's not. In April 2008, Richard Sundance Owen, a construction contractor and scuba diving instructor, established the Environmental Cleanup Coalition (ECC) to cope with pollution in the North Pacific. ECC has worked with other groups to identify ways to safely remove plastic and persistent organic pollutants from the ocean. The JUNK Scorpion Project is a trans-Pacific voyage trip from June to August 2008 to highlight the plastic in the patch organized by the Algalita Marine Research Foundation.
The North Pacific circulation produces two large plastic fragments called the Western Pacific garbage and the East Pacific garbage dump. These are collectively called the Great Pacific Trash Dump (GGP). It is in the middle of the North Pacific Ocean, the east is 1000 miles from the California coast, and the west extends hundreds of miles from Japan and Hawaii in the west. More specifically, the circulation is a large circular feature consisting of ocean currents rotating around the center point, rotating clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. Gilles occupies 40% of the sea. This is 25% of the world. According to Mr. Moore, they are all garbage deposits.
Like other concentrated oceanic waste areas of the world ocean, large Pacific trash patches are thought to emerge as a result of ocean or marine pollution concentrated by ocean currents. The garbage patch occupies a relatively relatively stationary area of the North Pacific, restricted by the circulation of the North Pacific Ocean, a remote place commonly called horse latitude. Circulation rotation mode absorbs waste from the North Pacific, including coastal waters other than North America and Japan. When a substance is trapped in the flow, the wind current driven surface current gradually moves the floating debris toward the center and captures it in that region.