
If you already knew about this topic, we hope you agree with how important this is, and if you didn't, then we hope you are a little more enlightened and encouraged to keep our oceans clean.
p.s. Remember, our GF is your GF=)
I wish I could be – a manatee!
Live contentedly.
Swim in shallow tropic sea.
On sandy bed I’d sleep
Where it is not too deep.
Mistaken quite a lot
A mermaid I am not!
A mermaid I am not!
I wish I could be – a manatee!
Live contentedly.
Swim in shallow tropic seas.
A mammal herbivore
Eat sea plants nothing more.
Then surfacing for air
That’s when I must take care!
That’s when I must take care!
I wish I could be – a manatee!
Live contentedly.
Swim in shallow tropic seas.
But garbage in the sea
Boats crashing into me
And poachers of the seas
Are all my enemies!
They’re all my enemies.
I wish I could be – a manatee!
Live contentedly.
Swim in shallow tropic seas.
But my biggest fear
Is that we’ll disappear.
us or there’ll be
No more Manatee to see!
No Manatee to see!
No Manatee to see!
No Manatee to see!
Another place were land reclamation is present is Singapore since the 1960s, and this happened on a large-scale basis. The reasons they needed to take materials and form it into land on the ocean is because the country was very small (581.5 kilometres squared) and the rising population. The reclaimed land is used for building more private and public housing estates along with recreational facilities and expanding commercial and industrial activities and transport needs like roads, expressways, the Mass Rapid Transit System, the port, and airport facilities.
From the image, it can be seen how much land has been added to Singapore. Land reclamation increased the total land area of Singapore by 51.5 kilometres to make it 633 kilometres squared. If all continues as planned, Singapore should be 733 kilometres squared by 2030. Barriers that prevent Singapore from continuing though, are that the water that land reclamation is done in has to be deeper (about 15 metres) instead of 5-10 metres like the past ones; the deeper the water, the higher the cost. Also more land would mean less room for boats to move in ports and sea lanes because Singapore also has limited sea space and needs the room to anchor bigger ships. Singapore even has three public agencies (HDB, JTC, and PSA Corporation) as well as private oil companies that focus on land reclamation.
· “...2/3rds of the earth is ocean, and is now a plastic soup.” [Moore] also showed the shriveled stomach from the rainbow runner [he] caught a couple weeks ago, with 14 fragments of plastic in its stomach.”
o http://junkraft.blogspot.com/
· “There are over 20,000 man-made chemicals produced by the billions of pounds annually that are dispersed throughout the globe in an open loop of consumption that often ends as waste to be buried, burned or to flow down coastal watersheds out to sea.”
o http://junkraft.blogspot.com/
· “Plastic in the oceanic garbage dump outweighs zooplankton six to one, and goes as far down as 300 feet below sea level—here’s hoping the plastic raft’s voyage gathers some more attention.”
o http://blogs.discovermagazine.com
· “In 1999 there was 0.002 gram of plastic per square meter of ocean in the Eastern Garbage Patch, and as of 2005 there was 0.004 gram per square meter in the same place. In that same period plastic production in North America alone experienced double-digit growth, topping 113 billion pounds in 2006, according to the plastics division of the American Chemistry Council in Arlington, Virginia.”
o http://discovermagazine.com/2008/jul/10-the-worlds-largest-dump/article_view?b_start:int=1&-C=