Angela takes the complicated steps to get to access to see the Midway Atoll herself and finds that what was heard was
Angela takes the complicated steps to get to access to see the Midway Atoll herself and finds that what was heard was
The objective of the experiment was to determine the density of a metal along with the density of distilled water. In an attempt to help the experimenters more thoroughly understand the relationship between concentration and density.…
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch (GPGP) has caused a lot of problems. People have come up with ideas as to how we can fix the problem in a cost effective and plausible way. One of the major concerns is the wildlife in the oceans. Marine biologists use devices such a waterproof cameras to track the movements and habits of marine life. This may allow us to see how the trash is affecting the animals in their habitats but can be disrupted if there is to high of a concentration of trash in the water. Marine biologists also use biostatistical programs and microcomputers to enter in information that tracks the animals. It can be shared with other scientists. While marine biologists and animal rescue teams are saving animals lives…
world where a garbage patch could form would in any of the main gyres so the west pacific, the…
In the Article, Plastics in our Oceans, Alison Pearce Stevens discusses about the problem of plastic in the ocean. According to the article, Plastic is a very big problem. Even worse plastic is difficult to degrade. This leads to the millions of trash and plastic wind up in the ocean every year. The author then reports that, a group of scientist, from Spain, conducted an experiment where at 141 locations they dropped a net and collected little pieces of plastic.…
In Purdy’s article, she discusses the five garbage patch gyres located in the ocean. She states that these gyres were noticed in the 1970s but didn’t catch the public eye until 1997 when Captain Charles Moore began to perform research. He observed that there was far more plastic than plankton. Purdy discusses how gyres damage the aquatic life and ecosystems on the ocean's floor. The article ends by stating how scientists agree that the only way to fix this issue is by drawing attention to the problem, taking steps such as recycling, and using items that contain no plastic…
Do you know about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch?. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is an issue that needs to be brought to attention. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch has happened because people's trash get in the ocean instead of going where it belongs.The effects of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch can be destructive to the nature around it. Some things are being done about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch such as plastic bags being banned.…
Everyday we throw out the trash we never really stop to contemplate where it all ends up like a landfill, a ship, or even the bottom of the ocean. On September 5th 1986, the Khian Sea was well on it’s way for becoming the World’s Most Unwanted Garbage. The ship had so many toxins, infestations, and many other unpleasants contents that no one would accept it. It must be horrifying and nauseating to even catch a glimpse of what was on the ship also to know they dumped it somewhere not worrying about the consequences is truly despicable.…
“Marine debris is typically described as any persistent, manufactured, or processed solid material discarded, disposed of, or abandoned in the marine and coastal environment” (Richard C. Thompson 11). If this is the case, how does marine debris end up in and around the water? According to Kimberly Amaral with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, marine debris can reach the ocean three ways; being flushed down the toilet or washed down the drain, ultimately ending up in the ocean; an object getting carried down the landscape or swept into the sewer by rainfall; or items thrown off a ship, landing directly in the ocean (whoi.edu). There are also three major problems caused by this marine debris ending up…
The article “Trashing the Oceans,” by Thomas Hayden, which was published in U.S. News and World Report, states how the oceans are being polluted by the trash going within it. Another article “Managing Marine Plastic Pollution,”John H. Tibbetts, was published in Environmental Health Perspectives, demonstrates how the pollution is greatly impacting the ocean. The article “Trashing oceans” utilizes ethos, logos, and pathos in a superior manner as compared to “Managing Marine Plastic Pollution” because it holds factual information and draws the reader’s interest.…
In addition to the environment, marine animals mistakenly eat plastic bags due to people’s littering, which keeps killing ocean wildlife. The clean and blue oceans in California always attract tourists to spend time enjoying it during their holiday. Nonetheless, trashes littered by people gather together in the oceans due to ocean current, and plastic bags play a key role. As plastic bags dissolve, it forms a collection of marine debris, which forms Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Generally speaking, Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a lot of marine debris is collected together by the ocean current. People can distinguish this garbage easily, but marine animals don’t have this ability. According to California Coastal Commission, marine debris harms…
According to the film, the waste leftover from the bottled water is polluting oceans, highways, fields and any other area one could think of. The pollution is so severe that there’s even a zone in the ocean the size of Texas filled with plastic, they described it in the documentary as a “plastic soup”. This area is called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch; the water contains forty six times more plastic than plankton. It is one of five zones. Little by little, the Earth is running out of space for all of the waste being produced.…
Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash is a non-fictional work written by Edward Humes, in which he demonstrates the effects of waste which human’s have relentlessly produced over the previous decades. In chapter 6, Nerds vs. Nurdles, Humes exhibits the damage that half a century of careless consumption has had on the environment and ecosystems. Our society today has been blind to its surroundings as a product of consumer apathy and does not realize the detrimental effects of our wasting until it is too large a task to resolve. Society neglects to think beyond the extent of the present and the potential consequences and harms materials could bring once we decided that it is no longer beneficial and toss them out. Scientists cannot even begin to predict the approximate amount of plastic nurdles that floats within the ocean. Without any awareness of the amount of trash, it makes the mission of cleaning the ocean impossible. An individual’s never satisfied hunger for the newest technology continually swells the ocean with increasing plastic. Synthetic material is viewed as a necessity for making everyday life easier. Ironically, plastic gradually finds a path back to harm society that appreciates it so greatly. Through bio-magnification, plastic finds a way back to humans through the consumption of seafood; additionally humans ingest chemicals from synthetics which aquatic animals previously consumed. As plastic remains in the oceans it will continually find a path up the food chain, consequently humans will inescapably ingest their own trash through fish and crustaceans which occupy large portions of daily diets. Consumers also avoid the most detrimental aspect of ocean dumping, the result it has on phytoplankton, microscopic organisms that account for virtually 50% of oxygen. By blindly consuming and creating more garbage, civilization is inadvertently suffocating itself. The lacks of concern consumers and producers have for disposal methods are not…
We have all heard about how we are killing our oceans and how the coral and fish are suffering. We also hear how we have to clean the beaches, use eco-friendly materials and do our part to help, but does anyone ever tell us what is really happening in the oceans or how to help? In the article “11 Billion Pieces of Plastic Are Ridding Corals with Disease”, published in The Atlantic in January of 2018, Ed Yong interviews two microbiologists, Joleah Lamb and Rebecca Vega Thurber, on how plastic is destroying our coral reefs. The plastic cuts off oxygen and light from the coral casing many different kinds of diseases. Thurber gives some solutions how we can help solve this problem. For example, controlling how much plastic is made locally and how we dispose of plastic that is used. Yong makes several points by using…
This iswhere most of the garbage is on every island in the archipelago because all of the trash getscarried by the currents and end up here. We put on our gloves, got our shovels and were each putinto groups: plastic, glass or styrofoam, which had different garbage bags depending on whichyou were assigned. We collected 200 bags completely full of pollution. The amount of waste wasunbelieveable. We spent hours cleaning up. I was feelings quite anxious and very bewilderedtrying to understand how the beauty here was being compromised by fellow human beingsthousands of miles away.Over one million seabirds and 100,000 sea mammals are killed by pollution every year.The only thought going through my mind while picking up garbage was, if only people knewwhat kind of destruction they were causing. I could see signs of relief on the native faces withthe knowledge their homes were important to us. One Guna woman even said, “My family and Icannot even stand to look at that side of the island without feeling sick.” The impact of herstatement was intense. I was putting it all together. Everything and all matter is interconnected.After a long and tiring day we decided to prepare a late lunch as a thank you for letting usprovide for them. We made a typical Panamanian dish, arroz con pollo and sweet plantains.Because the sunset was amongst us, we determined that it was time to set sail back to the dock.A sunset boat ride was exactly what we all needed.A few months later at the GIN conference in Mexico, we presented our video and retoldof our experience with the Guna Yala island people. Sharing this with students from many partsof the world was exactly what we needed to allow this day to live on, understanding and…
Plastic is one of the resources that is polluting our environment. Some scientist believe that the more plastic added to the ocean the more harmful it is for the organism in the ocean. According to Tobias Kukulka, a physical oceanographer by University of Delaware stated in, Plastic below the Ocean Surface, "You have stuff that's potentially poisonous in the ocean and there is some indication that it's harmful to the environment, but scientists don't really understand the scope of this problem yet." Meaning that the more plastic put into the ocean it becomes more fragile it get and drift to the surface the birds, fish, or even other wildlife animals mistaken these plastic as food.…