Examples of using Garbage patch in English and their translations into German
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How large are the garbage patches?
Here's the second segment of CharlesMoore's sobering report on the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
However, I believe the Great Pacific Garbage Patch can completely clean itself in just 5 years.
This initial thought turned into a full-fledged initiative with plans to decrease the garbage patch by 50 percent by 2025.
And in the so-called North Pacific Garbage Patch, 46 percent of the garbage is plastic from fishing.
This flight will be the first in it'slong journey towards it's final destination: the Garbage Patch in heart of the Pacific Ocean.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch measures more than 700,000 square kilometers- that's 7 times the size of the Maldives.
Nearly twice the size of Texas, the Gweat Pacific Garbage Patch, or"Garbage Island.
However, the garbage patch only includes the area at the core of the gyre, where the plastic litter can become extremely dense.
A full roll-out of The OceanCleanup could ensure the'Great Pacific Garbage Patch' is reduced by 50% in just 5 years time!
A 21-year old Dutch scientist and inventor, Boyan Slat,is getting ready to clean up the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
To begin with the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a gyre of marine debris particles in the North Pacific.
Every year, almost seven million tonnes of plastic and synthetic waste land in our oceans,where they form vast garbage patches in the water.
In fact, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch consists of two separate massive expanses of plastic trash that have coalesced into one toxic, life-destroying mass.
An early 2018 articlepublished in Nature revealed that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch now spans over 600,000 square miles of the ocean's surface.
At first blush, that may not seem like that much garbage, but compared to the North Sea, the effect of the concentration in the garbage patches becomes clear.
On the way,it must have missed the"Great Pacific Garbage Patch", where the biggest maritime rubbish tip of all time has accumulated in the Pacific Ocean, covering an area half the size of Europe.
These words were written by Charles J. Moore,a man best known for discovering the Great Pacific Garbage Patch- which is exactly what it sounds like.
It's difficult to say just where a garbage patch begins, or exactly how much area it covers; to estimate this, the concentration of litter in the water would need to be measured at many different sites.
Ocean currents drag garbage from the sea-- much of it from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch-- to this spot, creating a plastic nightmare in paradise.
Although the North Sea is much closer to land(and therefore to the sources of pollution), on average it is home to only 30 to 35 pieces of plastic per square kilometre-only half as many as in the garbage patches, which are several thousands of kilometres from land.
An area in the North Pacific Ocean,also described as The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, is characterized by exceptionally high concentrations of plastics that have been trapped by the currents of the North Pacific Gyre.
After a 14-day trial, 240 nautical miles offshore,the system will be either towed to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch or return to shore for minor alterations.
Capt. Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundationfirst discovered the Great Pacific Garbage Patch-- an endless floating waste of plastic trash. Now he's drawing attention to the growing, choking problem of plastic debris in our seas.
Capt. Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundationfirst discovered the Great Pacific Garbage Patch-- an endless floating waste of plastic trash.
There was another unusual boat out there at the same time, doing as I was doing,bringing awareness to the North Pacific Garbage Patch, that area in the North Pacific about twice the size of Texas, with an estimated 3.5 million tons of trash in it, circulating at the center of that North Pacific Gyre.
It is estimated we use between 500 billion and 1.2 trillion plastic bags annually, 10% of which ends up in the sea-the result is the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a giant floating rubbish-island in the North Pacific.
And it ended up in the Boise River and then on to the Columbia River and then to the mouth of the Columbia and to the Pacific Ocean and then on to thisplace called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch-- which is this giant Pacific gyre in the North Pacific, where a lot of this plastic ends up floating around-- and then back onto the lagoon.
Benjamin Grabherr hat sein Masterstudium 2015 am Institut fÃ1⁄4r Kunst und Architektur abgeschlossen, seine Masterarbeit Uncharted Territory-Habitat in the Garbage Patch ist der Plattform CMT Construction Material Technology zugeordnet und wurde von Univ.-Prof.