Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard FD July August September 2023

Giant Floating Garbage Patch - confirmed in the Atlantic too.

by Sail-World/Daily Mail on 27 Feb 2010
Garbage patch in the Atlantic - aerial view SW
Polystyrene, thongs, bottle tops, and shotgun caps: There has been much publicity about the 'North Pacific Gyre Garbage patch', but now scientists have confirmed the existence of a giant garbage patch in the Atlantic Ocean as well.

The large floating patch of discarded plastic is north of the Caribbean and is a similar in volume to the 'great Pacific garbage patch' that lies in the middle of the North Pacific Gyre, a giant whirlpool caused by the currents of the ocean that collects floating objects into its centre.

Discarded plastic is known to harm seabirds and marine life, but Karen Lavender Law of the Sea Education Association said the problem in the Atlantic ocean had been 'largely ignored.'

Just some of the rubbish picked up during a sweep in the North Atlantic. Most pieces are only 1cm wide and can be swallowed by fish and birds. As the debris is so small it mingles in with the seaweed. Sea birds mistake the discarded plastic for food.

These revelations come after the results of a 22-year study were unveiled at the Ocean Sciences Meeting in Portland, U.S. During the study, the longest and most extensive record of plastic marine debris in any ocean basin, SEA undergraduates collected more than 64,000 tiny bits of plastic.

In a mammoth effort, scientists and students carried out 6,100 sweeps of the North Atlantic towing fine mesh nets behind a research vessel. More than half of these expeditions revealed floating pieces of plastic on the water surface.

This image shows the remains of albatross chicks mingled with the plastic junk they were fed by their parents. Thinking it was food, the adults picked it up from the vast rubbish patch in the Pacific and then brought it back to the nest

Researchers believe these fish died after swallowing bits of plastic found floating in the Atlantic Ocean

The researchers described the sheer diversity of what they had found in this synthetic soup in a voyage blog.
They wrote: 'We saw embedded in each patch a disturbing mosaic of plastic junk. We grabbed our nets and began fishing furiously, amassing a pile of bottle caps, shotgun shells, crates, toothbrushes, a boxer’s mouthpiece, and myriad unidentifiable chunks floated by, gently pulsating with the ocean’s currents.'

Dr Lavender Law said that most of the pieces of plastic were generally very small - about one centimetre across, and were accumulating fairly far north in the Atlantic.

The maximum 'plastic density' was 200,000 pieces of debris per square kilometre. It is impossible to measure the exact size of the patch as much of it floats beneath the surface.

'That's a maximum that is comparable with the Great Pacific Garbage Patch,' said Dr Law.

Henri-Lloyd Dynamic RangeNorth Sails Loft 57 PodcastPalm Beach Motor Yachts

Related Articles

Peters & May Round Antigua Race
Roy Disney's Pyewacket 70 takes line honours after fierce battle with Lee Overlay Partners lll Two very different yachts proved to be almost perfectly matched for much of today's challenging and memorable edition of this classic 50-mile course.
Posted today at 1:35 am
The Battle for La Larga begins
As the fleet heads towards Ibiza With very light winds and after a postponement of more than four hours, La Larga finally got under way today at 16h20 in the Bay of Palma.
Posted on 26 Apr
Register for the International Optimist Regatta
Early entry discount ends May 1! Register now for the 32nd International Optimist Regatta (IOR), TOTE Clinic, and TOTE Team Race, June 9-15, 2025.
Posted on 26 Apr
56th Semaine Olympique Française de Hyères overall
USA skiffs gold and silver as Italy and China top medal table The final day of the 56th edition of French Olympic Week saw Italy join China at the top of the medal table as they won a medal of every colour across the six Medal Races after China's exploits on Friday.
Posted on 26 Apr
Transat Paprec Day 7
Michel Desjoyeaux: "Ordinary people wouldn't agree to live through this" THE INTERVIEW. He will forever be the first. Alongside Jacques Caraës, Michel Desjoyeaux won the inaugural edition of the Transat Paprec. That was in 1992—he wasn't yet known as "the Professor," but already had all the talent.
Posted on 26 Apr
Transat Paprec Day 6
A high-tension weekend At sea for six days, the competitors have already completed a quarter of the Transat Paprec course. After crossing the Bay of Biscay, rounding Cape Finisterre, and sailing down the Portuguese coast, the fleet has now stretched out.
Posted on 25 Apr
56th Semaine Olympique Française de Hyères day 5
Israel deny China triple gold On a day of high pressure - in all senses - and drama in all the Medal series, team power and individual brilliance produced some of the closest board Finals in Hyères history.
Posted on 25 Apr
Sled looking to avoid 2024's late season slide
As the 52 Super Series starts next week in Saint-Tropez Fourth overall last season, 2024 and fourth also on 2022's final standings, fifth in 2023 Takashi Okura's USA flagged Sled team start 2025 looking to find the small percentage gains here and there.
Posted on 25 Apr
Smarter at the Dock, Safer at Sea
How Upgrades Are Changing Cruising The service being offered by yacht manufacturers leaps forward every year - responding to a market which demands the highest quality in every aspect.
Posted on 25 Apr
2025 O'pen Skiff North American "Un-Regatta
More than seventy junior sailors from as far as Switzerland traveled to Pensacola More than seventy junior sailors from as far as Switzerland traveled to Pensacola Yacht Club to experience the O'pen Skiff "Un-Regatta" vibe.
Posted on 25 Apr