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- Q17080625 subject Q7237865.
- Q17080625 subject Q8198825.
- Q17080625 subject Q8608457.
- Q17080625 subject Q8765684.
- Q17080625 abstract "The Indian Ocean garbage patch, discovered in 2010, is a gyre of marine litter suspended in the upper water column of the central Indian Ocean, specifically the Indian Ocean Gyre, one of the five major oceanic gyres. The patch does not appear as a continuous debris field. As with other patches in each of the five oceanic gyres, the plastics in it break down to ever smaller particles, and to constituent polymers. As with the other patches, the field constitutes an elevated level of pelagic plastics, chemical sludge, and other debris; primarily particles that are invisible to the naked eye.A similar patch of floating plastic debris in the Pacific Ocean, the Great Pacific garbage patch, was predicted in 1985, and discovered in 1997 by Charles J. Moore as he passed through the North Pacific Gyre on his return from the Transpacific Yacht Race. The North Atlantic garbage patch was discovered in 2010.".
- Q17080625 thumbnail Oceanic_gyres.png?width=300.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink appetite_destruction.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink Seaplex.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink 5gyres.org.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink images-video-from-the-north-pacific-gyre.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink kaisei.blipback.com.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink plastic-trash-plagues-ocean.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink a_battle_at_midway.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink www.algalita.org.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink trash-vortex.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink story.php?storyId=15713260.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink 22Plastics-t.html?_r=1&oref=slogin.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink article.cfm?id=plastic-surf.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink capt_charles_moore_on_the_seas_of_plastic.html.
- Q17080625 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=M7K-nq0xkWY.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q1057706.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q11474.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q1250263.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q1395805.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q15195818.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q1552545.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q16823974.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q17284942.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q17631200.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q191468.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q214700.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q230850.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q3089262.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q3123657.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q3183.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q3929.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q39379.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q4356077.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q463960.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q5079370.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q637703.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q638904.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q7237865.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q7445618.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q7809.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q81163.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q8198825.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q8608457.
- Q17080625 wikiPageWikiLink Q8765684.
- Q17080625 comment "The Indian Ocean garbage patch, discovered in 2010, is a gyre of marine litter suspended in the upper water column of the central Indian Ocean, specifically the Indian Ocean Gyre, one of the five major oceanic gyres. The patch does not appear as a continuous debris field. As with other patches in each of the five oceanic gyres, the plastics in it break down to ever smaller particles, and to constituent polymers.".
- Q17080625 label "Indian Ocean garbage patch".
- Q17080625 depiction Oceanic_gyres.png.