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Post by reden on Mar 20, 2023 0:12:16 GMT
I was concerned about the Pacific Garbage Patch and how much garbage and plastic is poured to the sea every year. I asked AnthroHeart to ask the dolphins about it. He said that most dolphins don't know about it. I did not ask further on that line. Next I asked him to ask the ocean about it. In some sense, it's like asking Earth, but it may be the spirit of Earth and the spirit of the Ocean are different. He said the garbage patch had become one with the ocean. This fits with an article that says the garbage patch hosts an ecosystem and life: futurism.com/great-pacific-garbage-patch-ecosystem-climate-pollution , and a Twitter thread that says The Ocean Cleanup (a nonprofit organization that cleans the ocean) caught hundreds of animals alongside plastic, and that they would die/had been killed.
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Post by reden on Mar 20, 2023 16:26:24 GMT
I asked "If the ocean has integrated the pacific garbage patch, does this mean it handles any amount of contamination and doesn't really mind? Can you please ask that?" AnthroHeart replied: "I'm getting it would prefer not to add to it."
This fits with what that woman in another Twitter link said, that instead of cleaning it up, plastic should be caught at the rivers.
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Post by reden on Mar 21, 2023 1:44:32 GMT
"Do you think that the Caspian Sea separate from the Ocean? Do you think that all rivers and lakes have their own consciousness?" "I don't know, yes".
Note this may have been just speculation.
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Post by AnthroHeart on Mar 21, 2023 14:14:33 GMT
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch (GPG) is a gyre of marine debris particles located roughly from 135°W to 155°W and 35°N to 42°N. It covers an approximate surface area of 1.6 million square kilometers – an area twice the size of Texas and three times the size of France.0 Some 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic are estimated to be floating in an accumulation zone in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.1
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