HOW TO SAVE MONEY Nowadays people say that it is hard to save extra money because all the things are expensive; in contrast, there are many ways to save up extra money. For example, buying a piggy, turning off all the electronic devices, and selling recycled items will help you to save extra money for the future. First having a piggy bank is necessary. A piggy bank will help you to save all the coins that you don’t use or all the ones that are in your living room, bedroom, on the floor or even on
The poem, in its most simplistic state, speaks to the inevitability of growing old and death. The title, ‘The Wild Swans at Coole,’ gives extraordinary meaning to ordinary birds as they carry out their typical activities on a pond; something poetry is famed for. The speaker has visited this pond for quite some time and is now on his ‘nineteenth autumn.’ ‘All has changed’ since his first visit, but the swans, the pond, the surrounding landscape, has remained ‘still’; a word that resonates throughout
The ocean is constantly in motion. The energy that arrives into the oceanic system on the planetary scales create large scale mean flows that are constantly breaking down into smaller scales features. The most important source of energy is the differential solar heat, warmer in the equator and colder in the poles. With the water transport, also heat, nutrients, salt, organisms and chemical particles in the ocean are moved, regulating the planet whether, climate and marine ecosystems. Both large scale
spend your leisure time and relax. Just visualize the wind flowing through your hair while you stroll along the cool, damp sand, not to mention, the beautiful ocean horizon…You like this vision so much that you decide to go to the beach for yourself. While strolling along the shore, you stumble upon a storm drain that feeds into the ocean. There’s a stream flowing out of the storm drain and it’s filled with trash. A lot of trash that’s surging into the water and won’t stop. Trash polluting our beaches
Gyre can be seen in Chris Jordan’s collection Running the Numbers II. This piece of art is a seascape of a thrashing wave that is part of a swirling ocean. In the distance you can see a mountain along with men in boats that are trying to battle this angry being. The curves of the lines are swooping and curvy, with only the tips of the wave having pointy and sharp lines. There seems to be bright objects of trash that is being thrown back in the water, towards these men in the boats. The colors of
problem over the last couple of decades. The Pacific Ocean, covering about 46% of the Earth 's water surface, making it larger than all of the Earth 's land area combined, is vastly polluted. This issue is called The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, also known as the Pacific trash vortex, which is a gyre of marine debris in the North Pacific Ocean discovered in 1997 by Capt. C. Moore. The Great Pacific garbage patch formed slowly as a result of the ocean or marine pollution and gathered by oceanic currents
nature but of man. Moore stated, “It’s just that I couldn’t survey the surface of the ocean for any period of time while standing on deck without seeing some anthropogenic debris, something that was human in origin, float by. Not necessarily a large something, but just something” (Greenberg). The “something” that he found was broken down bits of plastic that had gone through a gyre. In the Pacific Ocean a gyre is wind and currents that circulate the water in a clockwise motion. This motion makes
Should water companies be blamed for the pollution of the ocean? Plastic and garbages have been polluting our water for years. Many people who litter on the ocean have been a harm to the fish and marine mammals. The marine plastic pollution has impacted about 267 species worldwide. This includes 86% sea turtles species and 44% of all sea birds species. Plastic pollution has impacted them with fatalities such as ingestion, starvation, suffocation and infections. Water bottle company 's shouldn 't
Plastic is extremely slow to breakdown and because it is of a low density it tends to stay floating in the oceans and can be carried huge distances. Plastics form a massive part of our everyday lives and are part of nearly everything we manufacture and have thousands of uses. As technology advances plastics are becoming more and more important to us. It is said
preserve our history for the public. The Natural History Museum shows our fascinating world that surrounds us and our place in it. Looking closely at the “Sant Ocean Hall” and the “Living on the Ocean Planet” exhibits, I learned about the biggest surface of the planet, the ocean. The warming of the ocean, ocean acidification, and how the ocean is important to every living organism, including us, are tackled by these exhibitions to inform the everlasting effect of climate change and its effect on marine
estuaries. But because of human influence coral reefs around the world are dying. Human coastal development, pollution, ocean warming, and ocean acidification are all things that threaten them. The World Research Institute estimated that about ¾ of the worlds shallow reefs are threatened by climate change, pollution, and overfishing. All in which are man made influences that affect the ocean greatly. It is predicted that by the year 2050 90% of the coral reefs on earth will be dead or threatened. Not only
earth and our oceans by burning greenhouse gases, we cause climate change. This affects the coral as they can’t withstand the water raising by only a few degrees. This often causes coral bleaching, which kills these animals. Also, storms can destroy reefs, also often caused by humans affecting the environment. Around 50% of our coral has died, and this has a major impact on many other organisms, and the world in general. Many fish live in reefs, and need it survive, and this ruins the ocean, the most
preserve our history for the public. The Natural History Museum shows our fascinating world that surrounds us and our place in it. Looking closely at the “Sant Ocean Hall” and the “Living on the Ocean Planet” exhibits, I learned about the biggest surface of the planet, the ocean. The warming of the ocean, ocean acidification, and how the ocean is important to every living organism, including us, are tackled by these exhibitions to inform the everlasting effect of climate change and its effect on marine
does all of our plastic debris go once we discard of them in the trash? The answer, oftentimes, is the ocean. According to a UC Santa Barbara study, over 8 million tons of plastic is thrown into the ocean each year, and since 10% of our trash ends up in the ocean, 90% of which being plastic waste, it is estimated that 5 trillion pieces of plastic, weighing 250,000 tons, are floating in our oceans right now. However, when you visit your local beach, it is unlikely that you see mounds of trash washing
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a gyre in the Pacific Ocean which has been collecting marine debris for many years, forming a trash vortex of astounding size in the middle of the ocean. The majority of the trash collected is plastic, or microplastics, due to their extremely resistant nature based on their chemical composition. They are bonded so tightly that it is incredibly difficult to break the plastics down, so instead, they remain in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch for indefinite periods
the rate we get rid of it; it will soon overtake our oceans. In 2010 alone, it was estimated that over 300 million tons of new plastics were produced around the world, (QTD. By UC Davis USA on YouTube). Many oceans from North America and Japan are being polluted by our carelessness and are causing our marine life to suffer. Marine mammals such as seals are being found entangled in plastic fishnets and several drown. It is tragic that the oceans have large amounts of plastic contamination which is
everything that is in our world comes from or originated in the ocean. The air we breathe, the water we drink, and even ourselves wouldn’t be possible without the oceans that gave us life and a home on Earth. As said by National Geographic, “Our oceans are so vast and deep that until fairly recently, it was widely assumed that no matter how much trash and chemicals humans dumped into them, the results would be negligible.” Our oceans take up 70% of the Earth’s surface. It also filters and creates
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch(GPGP), also known as “Pacific Trash Vortex” would be best known as a disaster in our ocean. The GPGP is a collection of marine debris in the North Pacific ocean. The garbage patch is known to expand from the coast of California to Japan. According to marnie scientist Marcus Eriksen, the garbage patch is the largest plastic dump on earth(Eriksen). Much of the marine life is getting damaged and is in danger of dying. The big question is how we can prevent and put a
The article that I decided to research and write about is called “Rusty Waters”, written by Rob Raiswell. This paper discusses that the Greenland Ice Sheet plays an important role in how the North Atlantic Ocean receives iron and how this iron can be utilized by phytoplankton. The scientists came up with this idea through a series of tests, observations and critical thinking. Using different samples of meltwater from glaciers in the Greenland ice sheet, they determined the amount of iron available
of garbage, populated by millions of smaller trash islands that may be hidden underwater or spread out over many miles. That can make it maddeningly difficult to study — we still don 't know exactly how big the garbage patch is. Recent ocean voyages have confirmed the garbage patch covers an enormous area, and despite a lack of cohesion, it is relatively dense in places. Researchers have collected up to 750,000 pieces of microplastic from a single square kilometer, for example, and after