Thursday, April 8, 2010
Pacific gyre examined today
Expert to speak on pollution problems in the ocean for Green Coast Day.
By Coast Report Staff
Published: Wednesday, April 7, 2010 10:12 AM PDT
Orange Coast College will host its fifth annual Green Coast Day today to help spread awareness about plastic pollution in the Pacific Ocean.
Captain Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation will present “Pollution in the Pacific Ocean” today in the Robert B. Moore Theater at 9:35 a.m.
A youth in a boat picks through plastic garbage in the Pacific Ocean. A lecture today will discuss the problem of pollution.
The lecture is hosted by OCC oceanography instructor Tom Garrison and the Marine Science and International Business programs and sponsors include the research foundation, the South Coast Air Quality management District, Plug in America, the Orange County Prius Club and Leah Baylor.
Moore’s lecture will focus on the affects to the ocean of years of discarded plastics floating off the coast. He will discuss the giant gyre in the Pacific Ocean and the damage it brings to ocean wildlife.
Moore grew up in Long Beach but often traveled to remote destinations with his father. He attended the University of California at San Diego where he studied chemistry and Spanish.
Moore founded Algalita Marine Research Foundation in 1994 after 25 years running a woodworking and finishing business. In 1995 he launched his purpose-designed, aluminum-hulled research vessel Alguita, in Hobart, Tasmania, and helped organize the Australian government’s first research voyage to document human caused contamination of Australia’s east coast.
After returning to California, he became a coordinator of the State Water Resources Control Board’s Volunteer Water Monitoring Steering Committee and developed chemical and bacterial monitoring methods for the Surfrider Foundation’s Blue Water Task Force.
He was also instrumental in helping to assess for the first time a study of the entire Southern California Bight along the coastline from Point Conception to San Diego.
The Algalita Marine Research Foundation is based in Long Beach and is dedicated to the protection of the marine environment and its watersheds through research, education and restoration. The foundation studies that impact of plastic marine pollution on the environment.
In addition to Moore’s speech, and as part of Green Coast Day, an Electric and Low Emission Vehicles Showcase will take place in the Quad from 11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m.
Extra credit slips will be made available for both the speech and the vehicle showcase.
For more information contact John Fawcett at 714-432-5634, ext. 1 or jfawcett@occ.cccd.edu.
By Coast Report Staff
Published: Wednesday, April 7, 2010 10:12 AM PDT
Orange Coast College will host its fifth annual Green Coast Day today to help spread awareness about plastic pollution in the Pacific Ocean.
Captain Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation will present “Pollution in the Pacific Ocean” today in the Robert B. Moore Theater at 9:35 a.m.
A youth in a boat picks through plastic garbage in the Pacific Ocean. A lecture today will discuss the problem of pollution.
The lecture is hosted by OCC oceanography instructor Tom Garrison and the Marine Science and International Business programs and sponsors include the research foundation, the South Coast Air Quality management District, Plug in America, the Orange County Prius Club and Leah Baylor.
Moore’s lecture will focus on the affects to the ocean of years of discarded plastics floating off the coast. He will discuss the giant gyre in the Pacific Ocean and the damage it brings to ocean wildlife.
Moore grew up in Long Beach but often traveled to remote destinations with his father. He attended the University of California at San Diego where he studied chemistry and Spanish.
Moore founded Algalita Marine Research Foundation in 1994 after 25 years running a woodworking and finishing business. In 1995 he launched his purpose-designed, aluminum-hulled research vessel Alguita, in Hobart, Tasmania, and helped organize the Australian government’s first research voyage to document human caused contamination of Australia’s east coast.
After returning to California, he became a coordinator of the State Water Resources Control Board’s Volunteer Water Monitoring Steering Committee and developed chemical and bacterial monitoring methods for the Surfrider Foundation’s Blue Water Task Force.
He was also instrumental in helping to assess for the first time a study of the entire Southern California Bight along the coastline from Point Conception to San Diego.
The Algalita Marine Research Foundation is based in Long Beach and is dedicated to the protection of the marine environment and its watersheds through research, education and restoration. The foundation studies that impact of plastic marine pollution on the environment.
In addition to Moore’s speech, and as part of Green Coast Day, an Electric and Low Emission Vehicles Showcase will take place in the Quad from 11 a.m. until 1:30 p.m.
Extra credit slips will be made available for both the speech and the vehicle showcase.
For more information contact John Fawcett at 714-432-5634, ext. 1 or jfawcett@occ.cccd.edu.
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1 comment:
Finally!!! At least some work is being done. Maybe it could start being done on a larger scale
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