Item Description
About six months ago, University of Hawaii scientists Nikolai Maximenko and Jan Hafner mapped the likely route of debris dumped into the ocean by the March 11 Japanese tsunami. Just last week, a Russian sail training vessel used their maps to find the debris field. Since the North Pacific is really, really big – over three times the size of the United States – how did they do it?
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Archive
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Geolocation
19.8967662, -155.5827818
Latitude
19.8967662
Longitude
-155.58278180000002
Location
19.8967662,-155.58278180000002
Media Creator Username
KH
Media Creator Realname
KH
Frequency
Archive Once
Scope
One Page
Language
English
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English Title
How scientists found debris from the Japanese tsunami 700 miles off Midway | Deep Sea News
English Description
About six months ago, University of Hawaii scientists Nikolai Maximenko and Jan Hafner mapped the likely route of debris dumped into the ocean by the March 11 Japanese tsunami. Just last week, a Russian sail training vessel used their maps to find the debris field. Since the North Pacific is really, really big – over three times the size of the United States – how did they do it?
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frequency | Once | scope | Page | email | | language | English|
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http://wayback.archive-it.org/2438/20110301000000/http://www.deepseanews.com/2011/10/how-scientists-found-debris-from-japanese-tsunami-found-700-miles-off-midway/
Attribution URI
http://www.deepseanews.com/2011/10/how-scientists-found-debris-from-japanese-tsunami-found-700-miles-off-midway/