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Friday, April 16, 2010
Good morning,
If you have read Living Green for a good length of time
you have probably read about the Great Pacific Garbage
Patch. It is one of my favorite topics to use to illustrate
the importance of recycling.
But depressingly enough, a new garbage patch has just been
discovered in the Atlantic. The problem, apparently, is
much worse than we thought.
Please scroll down for excerpts from the article.
Thanks for reading,
Your Living Green editor
Email the Editor
***
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***
Researchers are warning of a new blight at sea: a swirl
of confetti-like plastic debris stretching over a remote
expanse of the Atlantic Ocean.
The floating garbage ? hard to spot from the surface and
spun together by a vortex of currents ? was documented
by two groups of scientists who trawled the sea between
scenic Bermuda and Portugal's mid-Atlantic Azores islands.
The studies describe a soup of micro-particles similar to
the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a phenomenon
discovered a decade ago between Hawaii and California that
researchers say is likely to exist in other places around
the globe.
The debris is harmful for fish, sea mammals ? and at the
top of the food chain, potentially humans ? even though
much of the plastic has broken into such tiny pieces they
are nearly invisible.
Since there is no realistic way of cleaning the oceans,
advocates say the key is to keep more plastic out by
raising awareness and, wherever possible, challenging a
throwaway culture that uses non-biodegradable materials
for disposable products.