TVs, Fridges and Fishing Boats: How TWENTY MILLION
Tons of Japan Tsunami Debris Is Closing in on Hawaii
by
Mark Duell
Daily Mail
Televisions,
fridges and furniture pieces are heading for Hawaii, as a huge amount
of debris from Japans earthquake sails across the Pacific.
Up to 20 million
tons of debris from the earthquake in March is traveling faster
than expected and could reach the U.S. West Coast in three years.
A Russian ships
crew spotted the debris which included a 20ft long fishing boat last month after passing the Midway Islands.
We have
a rough estimate of 5 to 20 million tons of debris coming from Japan,
University of Hawaii researcher Jan Hafner told KITV.
Experts have
revised predictions to say the debris will now reach the Midway
Islands by winter and Hawaii in less than two years.
Crew members
on the Russian training ship STS Pallada spotted the debris 2,000
miles from Japan, including a fishing boat from Fukushima, reported
AFP.
They
saw some pieces of furniture, some appliances, anything that can
float and they picked up a fishing boat, Mr Hafner told
KITV.
A crew member
told AFP: 'We keep sighting things like wooden boards, plastic bottles,
buoys from fishing nets [small and big ones], an object resembling
a wash basin, drums, boots, other wastes.'
'We also sighted
a TV set, fridge and a couple of other home appliances.'
A spokesman
for the International Pacific Research Center at the University
of Hawaii said: 'The Russian ship... found an array of unmistakable
tsunami debris on its homeward voyage from Honolulu to Vladivostok.'
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October
25, 2011
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