Tag Archives: visualization

We’re making massive waste islands in the sea

We’re making massive waste islands in the sea

By on 24 Aug 2015commentsShare

That message in a bottle you tossed into the sea as a young rapscallion? Remember how you didn’t get a response? It’s because oceans aren’t the same thing as carrier pigeons. Instead of sending bottles bobbing merrily on their way across the Pacific, ocean currents tend to push bits of trash to convergence points in the ocean called garbage patches.

The video above shows a new data visualization from NASA illustrating the phenomenon. By mapping the paths of free-floating ocean buoys distributed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration over a period of 35 years, scientists were able to verify the garbage patch effect, as well as the locations of the patches. Aside from providing these insights, the visualization is a win for science, because the researchers were able to lend some more validation to an ocean current model called ECCO2. When the group generated a cloud of particles — digital buoys — and ran the model, the particles ended up in the same spots as the physical buoys they’d been tracking.

There are probably more than 5 trillion pieces of plastic in the ocean. The message in a bottle example might be a bit of red herring, though, since most of the plastic floating in the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” is thought to come in the form of microplastics smaller than a thumbtack, which are distributed throughout the water column at the rate of about one piece every two cubic meters of water. That said, a recent expedition gathering data on the Great Pacific Garbage Patch trawled up mostly medium to large-sized pieces of trash. Either way, there’s a lot of garbage out there. You’re better off sending a postcard.

Source:

Garbage Patch Visualization Experiment

, NASA.

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Oceans 15


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Oceans 15We’re tired of talking about oceans like they’re just a big, wet thing somewhere out there. Let’s make it personal.

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We’re making massive waste islands in the sea

Posted in Anchor, Everyone, FF, GE, LAI, ONA, Radius, solar, solar panels, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on We’re making massive waste islands in the sea

Look at this trippy map of all your climate-related Google searches

let them google that for you

Look at this trippy map of all your climate-related Google searches

By on 17 Jun 2015commentsShare

Did you know that the computer users of New Delhi, Mexico City, and Bangkok are more likely to ask questions about global warming (and similar terms like “climate change”) than New Yorkers are? Or that computer users in Hong Kong (who ask fewer climate change questions than New Yorkers, but more than residents of Sydney, Australia) are looking for both the up and the downsides to our coming climate apocalypse? Their top three searches: “What are we doing to stop global warming?” “What are the advantages of global warming?” and “Will the earth die because of global warming?”

Well, now you do. Thanks to a snazzy new data visualization project by the Oakland-based Pitch Interactive and Google’s News Lab, you can find out even more about the global climate anxiety cocktail patter. (Though I am going to go right ahead and warn you that the rotating Earth that is clearly meant to be the most awe-inspiring feature of the visualization is more on the side of nausea-inducing.)

The visualization also tracks several other environmentally-related questions, both by city (Mexico City: “How much trash is in the ocean each year?” New York: “How many oceans are there?”) and over time. It quickly becomes clear, for example, that despite Typhoon Haiyan and Hurricane Sandy and the rise in climate change refugees, computer-related curiosity (or at least Google-using curiosity) about climate change has yet to recapture the heights that it reached in 2006, when An Inconvenient Truth came out.

I will admit to feeling a little curmudgeonly about data visualizations like this. There’s nothing here that can’t be found with some judicious use of regular old Google Trends. There you can also find that no country is more interested in climate change than Fiji. Is that because the Fiji Islands are plan B for the people of Kirabati — another chain of islands threatened by sea level rise? Is it because Google Trends is a pretty inexact way to measure interest in anything? I will leave those questions for another day, and also add that the video below is a nice summation of what the visualization is trying to do.

Source:
Google just created a stunning visualization of how the world searches for ‘global warming’

, Washington Post.

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Look at this trippy map of all your climate-related Google searches

Posted in alo, Anchor, FF, GE, LAI, ONA, Radius, solar, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Look at this trippy map of all your climate-related Google searches