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Great Pacific Garbage Patch

The 1.6-million-square-kilometer accumulation of oceanic plastic debris — Morton's paradigmatic hyperobject, too distributed to see as a whole.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is an area of the North Pacific Ocean where ocean currents have concentrated buoyant plastic debris — estimated to span roughly 1.6 million square kilometers, approximately three times the size of France. It cannot be photographed from space. A ship could sail through its densest region without the captain noticing anything unusual — just water with an odd shimmer, a faint chemical smell, fragments resembling plankton more than packaging. Researchers sample it, model it, track its currents, measure its density at specific coordinates. But the entity itself — the aggregate of every plastic bottle cap, degraded grocery bag, fragment of synthetic object that entered the Pacific watershed over seventy years — exceeds any individual observer's perceptual apparatus. It is too large, too distributed, too temporally vast, too entangled with the medium it inhabits.

In The You On AI Field Guide

Morton uses the Garbage Patch as the opening example in Hyperobjects (2013) to introduce entities transcending spatiotemporal localization. The Patch has no shore. It has no clear boundary. Its density

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