Pacific Garbage Patch Survey

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As a group, we each contributed possible survey questions to ask people outside of this course regarding the Pacific Garbage Patch. Each questions dealt with the extremities of the ocean being contaminated with waste to how often is one person contributing that waste. Going into this survey, I had no knowledge of what the Pacific Garbage Patch was and was intrigued to research it and was astonished by what I have found. Not only are people treating the ocean as their personal trash can but it is creating a black hole in the ocean destroying all who inhabit it. With that being said, the results that came back from our survey was exactly what I was hoping for; all we're knowledgeable about our ocean and the patch in our Pacific Ocean floating with debris.
When analyzing our data we had exactly 114 responses, which of 100 I will be using to analyze. The number one question we surveyed was, "How often do you recycle?". I tend to recycle often and the easiest way to do so is having a separate bin at home for one's recyclables. Only 8% had indicated that they rarely recycle versus 45% that recycle all the time. To compare, that is a big
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The answers we got back we're amazing. Exactly 92% said yes and only 8% said no, to knowing about how plastic debris is hurting our oceans. When people tend to throw plastic bottles and other wastes into our oceans, they are creating a clump of trash that gets combined together. Hence, the Pacific Garbage Patch is the formal name of it. Other way it damages our oceans is that it's also damaging the animals that live there. They can easily choke on the plastic or get caught around a plastic soda holder. It is nothing blinding if and when someone goes to the beach, they will often see plastic garbage and other waste riding up the shore. Fortunately, people have been coming together to clean up the ocean's garbage to make it cleaner and