罢丑别听聽of the聽聽shows that the amount of debris swirling in the North Pacific has been 鈥,鈥 the expedition group said.
On Monday,聽, a project founded in 2013 by then-18-year-old聽 with the goal of ridding the world鈥檚 oceans of plastic, shared initial findings from its 聽of the聽聽between Hawaii and California.
Researchers documented more garbage at the edge of the gyre than they expected to see at its center, where debris is more concentrated, Slat said at at Moffett Airfield in Mountain View, California. In just 2 1/2 hours, he said, the crew observed more than 1,000 large floating objects.
鈥淎lthough, again, we still need to get a detailed analysis of the results, I think it鈥檚 really quite safe to say that it鈥檚 worse than we thought,鈥 Slat said. 鈥淭his underlines the urgency of why we need to clean it up and that we really need to take care of the plastic that鈥檚 already out there in the ocean, because all this big stuff, over the next few decades, will crumble down into those small microplastics.鈥
Understanding how much marine debris is out there will be essential to Slat鈥檚聽, the foundation said.
鈥淚nstead of going after the plastic using nets and vessels, which would take an infinite amount of time, ,鈥 Slat told The Huffington Post last year. 鈥淭he plastic moves toward the center, and therefore the concentration increases 100,000 times. You really can walk on the water.鈥
The organization hopes to deploy its Pacific array in 2020 and says it could remove聽 of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch 鈥 more than 150 million pounds of trash 鈥 in a decade.
The aerial survey, which continues through Friday, seeks to better聽, including abandoned fishing nets. Using human observers and advanced sensors, the organization is mapping the area from a C-130 Hercules aircraft named Ocean Force One.
The project says data collected during these low-altitude flights will be combined with the findings of last year鈥檚聽鈥,鈥 during which some 30 vessels covered a 1.4 million-square-mile area between Hawaii and the U.S. West Coast, tracking plastic debris.
鈥淚鈥檝e studied plastic in all the world鈥檚 oceans, but 聽as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch,鈥 Julia Reisser, lead oceanographer at The Ocean Cleanup, said in a statement following last year鈥檚 survey.
A solution to the planet鈥檚 decades-long addiction to plastic cannot come soon enough. A聽in January found that if we continue our current ways,聽the world鈥檚 oceans would .
The current aerial survey, Slat said Monday, 鈥渞eally brings us another step closer to initiating the largest cleanup in history.鈥
Watch Monday鈥檚 press conference below.
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