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Scientists observe ‘tragic experiment’ of tsunami debris

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A top NOAA official had few answers to senators’ pointed questions about how much flotsam will wash up and where, how hazardous it will be and how it will be cleaned up. But there is no reason to be overly alarmed, the administrator said, because there is no evidence of any huge sheets of debris headed ashore.

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The tsunami dragged about 5 million tons of material into the Pacific and in the weeks after, satellite imagery showed a massive debris field floating out to sea.

Most of the homes, vehicles and appliances quickly broke up and sank close to shore, but about 2 million tons has dispersed across the Pacific, much of it now floating somewhere northeast of Hawaii.

As the capsized boats, shipping containers and fuel drums move closer to North America, the U.S. government has asked freighters, fishermen and the U.S. Coast Guard to report anything out of the ordinary. But the Pacific Ocean is so vast and the debris so widely scattered that experts say it might not be possible to see more than one piece at a time.

Yet some items have been unmistakable, like the Japanese fishing boat marked Fukushima that a Russian vessel spotted drifting hundreds of miles from Midway Atoll.

Experts say only a small fraction of the debris — perhaps 5 percent — will make it to the West Coast, where it may wash up intermittently over the course of a year before being pulled back toward Hawaii.

Much of the material — timber and furniture, for instance — may break down before reaching U.S. shores, but fishing nets, buoys, floats and plastics may float for months without being corroded by the salt water and waves.

The rest is eventually to join the great concentration of debris already circling endlessly in a vast, slow-moving ocean vortex known as the North Pacific Gyre.

For some scientists, the tsunami offers an unprecedented opportunity to study the fate of a huge volume of debris as it spreads from a single geographic point and single moment in time through the world’s largest ocean.

“A tragic experiment of nature,” University of Hawaii researcher Nikolai Maximenko calls it.

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