You probably picture the Great Pacific Garbage Patch as a floating island of bottles and bags you could walk across. But sail right through it or look down from a satellite, and you would not see a thing. The most famous environmental phenomenon on Earth is virtually invisible.
This deep dive unpacks how the patch formed, where the trash really comes from, and the strange mutant ecosystem it spawned. From the physics of ocean gyres to a paradigm-shifting study on the patch's true origins, the reality is far stranger and more complex than the myth.
How the North Pacific gyre and Ekman flow trap debris into a dispersed microplastic confetti soup
The scale: about 1.6 million square kilometers, roughly three times the size of France
The 2022 finding that 75% to 86% of the floating plastic is abandoned industrial fishing gear, not coastal runoff
The neopelagic communities of coastal species now thriving on plastic far out at sea
The Ocean Cleanup's System 03 and why its 20 million kilograms removed is only about 0.5% of the total
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