Many of you might be wondering, How does is this Garbage patch form in the middle of the ocean? Well to answer that question it did not form on its own. The North Pacific Subtropical Gyre is a spiral of seawater where warm water from the South Pacific collides with cooler water from the north, and this is where the garbage comes together. This gyre is quickly becoming a plastic landscape, filled with waste and debris from human disposal. Interesting enough the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is more than just a floating island, but also involves debris that is located underwater for miles. Consisting mainly of plastic, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch isn’t biodegradable, meaning “the microbes that break down other substances don’t recognize plastic as food, leaving it to float there forever” according to the Mother Nature Network. Even
Many of you might be wondering, How does is this Garbage patch form in the middle of the ocean? Well to answer that question it did not form on its own. The North Pacific Subtropical Gyre is a spiral of seawater where warm water from the South Pacific collides with cooler water from the north, and this is where the garbage comes together. This gyre is quickly becoming a plastic landscape, filled with waste and debris from human disposal. Interesting enough the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is more than just a floating island, but also involves debris that is located underwater for miles. Consisting mainly of plastic, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch isn’t biodegradable, meaning “the microbes that break down other substances don’t recognize plastic as food, leaving it to float there forever” according to the Mother Nature Network. Even