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The Great Pacific Garbage Patch (also Pacific trash vortex and North Pacific Garbage Patch [8]) is a garbage patch, a gyre of marine debris particles, in the central North Pacific Ocean. It is located roughly from 135°W to 155°W and 35°N to 42°N . [ 9 ]
The North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (NPSG) is the largest contiguous ecosystem on earth. In oceanography, a subtropical gyre is a ring-like system of ocean currents rotating clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere caused by the Coriolis Effect. They generally form in large open ocean areas that lie ...
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The flow turns north along the western coast of South America in the Humboldt Current, the eastern boundary current that completes the South Pacific Gyre circulation. Like the North Pacific Gyre, the South Pacific Gyre has an elevated concentration of plastic waste near the center, termed the South Pacific garbage patch.
The current forms the southern part of the North Pacific Subpolar Gyre and the northern part of the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre. The North Pacific Current is formed by the collision of the Kuroshio Current, running northward off the coast of Japan, and the Oyashio Current, which is a cold subarctic current that flows south and circulates ...
Dust blown off the Alaskan coast into the North Pacific. Currents in the North Pacific Ocean. The discovery and naming of the first HNLC region, the North Pacific, was formalized in a seminal paper published in 1988. [6] The study concluded that surface waters of the eastern North Pacific are generally dominated by picoplankton despite the ...
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The North Pacific Intermediate Water is a well-defined salinity minimum, located in the North Pacific subtropical gyre. It occurs at a depth range of 300-800 meters and is confined to a narrow density range. NPIW forms when low-salinity, high-oxygen subpolar water is overrun by warm, saline subtropical waters.