yes it does because ocean mining results in carbon dioxide, and as you know carbon dioxide kills animals
no mining does not have anything to do with mining i think i don't really no but i think it has nothing to do with animals
no the ocean current is like a wind.
well bottles affect the ocean because the bottle(s) just sit in the ocean and get stuck on animals and soon it kills them
all the sea animals that live there
When you mine, you can be destroying homes of animals, and disrupting natural habitats.
The exact same way you affect the air as a human being, in theroy.
because animals wont live
Pollution in noise, water, land, thermal and air. This will probably kill some animals and affect the food chain.
Mining on land is less costly than mining in the deep ocean because it takes more equipment to go down to the bottom of the ocean, and all of that equipment costs more money than what they use on land.
Mining has stripped many lands in western Australia. This destroys the natural habitat decreasing plant life and leaving a hostile territory for the animals. The remaining animals will often relocate to an area less suited that the original environment. This can cause overcrowding with its resultant issues.
yes
Richard Asher Frank has written: 'Deepsea mining and the environment' -- subject(s): Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Ocean mining, Law and legislation, Ocean mining