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Plastic trash is collecting in vast areas of the north Pacific Ocean — and staying there. That's according to Marcus Eriksen of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation in California.

Marcus Eriksen: You get debris that leaves our coastal watersheds, goes out to sea, and gets stuck in the middle…

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Marcus Eriksen: [---2---]

The circular movement of the ocean – in the form of an ocean gyre – is trapping all this plastic. [---3---]

Marcus Eriksen: The size of the gyre is the entire garbage patch. [---4---]

[---5---] He said marine life feeds on it – including fish eaten by humans.

Marcus Eriksen : It's absorbing other toxic but already at there things as PCBs, pesticides from farms, oil drops from cars — like a sponge, a plastic particle, we have documented, can have up to a million times more pollutants stuck on it than ambient seawater.

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【視聽版科學(xué)小組榮譽出品】
Eriksen said this garbage in the north Pacific is less like a floating island, and more like a 'soup' of plastic. Particles of cups of spoons and knives of plastic bags and plastic bottles, and they get smaller down to the basic plastic polymer, which is microscopic. Eriksen spoke of the large rotating ocean gyre that covers much of the north Pacific. It's roughly twice the size of the United States. Eriksen said the plastic doesn't fully biodegrade and is often toxic.