1,000 years
1,000 years
No. The items in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch are not bonded together.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a large area in the Pacific Ocean where marine debris accumulates due to ocean currents. A map of the patch shows the extent of this pollution, helping researchers and policymakers understand the problem and work towards solutions.
Garbage pail kids are like cabbage patch kids but the company who make the garbage patch kids are making fun of it.The garbage patch kids can be found on trading cards in packs at places.They look like hobos.
Garbage patches, like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, are primarily caused by currents in the ocean concentrating marine debris in one area. Plastic waste, such as bottles and fishing gear, make up a large portion of the garbage patch. Irresponsible disposal of plastic items, along with inadequate waste management systems, contribute to the growth of these patches.
1997 the effect of water pollution on ecosystem
Currents can pick up and transport plastic debris from different parts of the ocean to specific areas. These patches, such as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, form where ocean currents converge and trap the floating debris. Once trapped, the garbage patch continues to grow as more plastic is carried in by the currents.
87,000 tons, according to the NY Times: See article: "The 'Great Pacific Garbage Patch' Is Ballooning, 87,000 Tons of Plastic and Counting"
None whatsoever!
It is located in an area call the North Pacific Gyre, which is a patch of the North Pacific Ocean that covers thousands of square miles roughly between the United States and Japan and reaching toward Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. It's called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch because the prevailing ocean currents tend to swirl around this patch of ocean, causing all manner of floating debris to be concentrated in the gyre.
Indiscriminate dumping.
Twice the size of Texas.