We’re making garbage patches on the ocean floor, too

Microplastics are transported in the deep sea by turbidity currents and bottom currents, which concentrate them in hotspots known as sediment drifts.

Enlarge / Microplastics are transported in the deep sea by turbidity currents and bottom currents, which concentrate them in hotspots known as sediment drifts. (credit: I. Kane et al. (2020))

Every year, millions of tonnes of plastic enter the oceans. If they’re buoyant, they get swept by surface currents into massive “garbage patches” like the famous ones in the North Pacific Ocean. But the tiny fragments and fibers of microplastics are harder to trace. As researchers have built up more evidence of their distribution, it’s becoming clearer that they may have a tendency to accumulate in particularly unfortunate places, like the surface currents where prey is plentiful and juvenile fish do a lot of feeding.

A paper in Science today reports a new hotspot: regions of the seafloor where sediments, swept along by deep currents, accumulate. Those same currents transport oxygen and nutrients to deep-sea ecosystems, meaning that the microplastics are probably accumulating in some of the most biodiverse spots of the seafloor.

Buried plastic

Much like weather on land, ocean currents are a morass of complex, interconnected systems, affected by local physical features. This makes it difficult to understand where plastics might end up. But we do know there’s a lot to track. Right now, only around one percent of the plastic in the oceans seems to accumulate on the surface; much of the rest probably settles in the depths.

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Source: Ars Technica – We’re making garbage patches on the ocean floor, too

Hey Wait a Minute, I Think I've Seen This Movie Before

Today in déjà vu: senior Trump administration officials have been pressing U.S. spy agencies to come up with evidence supporting unsubstantiated accusations that the novel coronavirus responsible for the ongoing global pandemic originated in a Chinese lab, according to the New York Times.

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Source: Gizmodo – Hey Wait a Minute, I Think I’ve Seen This Movie Before

What Parents-to-Be Should Pack in the Hospital Bag

Giving birth in the midst of a global health crisis is probably not what you were envisioning when you got pregnant. There is a lot you don’t have control over right now as everything from the frequency of pre-natal appointments to who you can bring into the labor and delivery room with you is in flux. But you will

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Source: LifeHacker – What Parents-to-Be Should Pack in the Hospital Bag

Blue Origin and SpaceX win contracts to develop NASA's Moon spacecraft

As it teased earlier in the week, NASA has awarded contracts in its quest for a Moon landing — and it’s a big win for the upstarts in the spaceflight industry. The administration has chosen Blue Origin, SpaceX and IT firm Dynetics to compete against…

Source: Engadget – Blue Origin and SpaceX win contracts to develop NASA’s Moon spacecraft

No Evidence of Coronavirus Reinfection, South Korean Officials Say

Some recovered covid-19 patients who again tested positive for the coronavirus likely weren’t reinfected after all. On Thursday, South Korean officials stated that there’s no evidence currently that the virus is reinfecting people in the country, and the test results that suggested reinfection were likely false…

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Source: Gizmodo – No Evidence of Coronavirus Reinfection, South Korean Officials Say

Xbox Game Pass Hurdles 10 Million User Mark Amid Call For Social Distancing

Xbox Game Pass Hurdles 10 Million User Mark Amid Call For Social Distancing
Microsoft’s communications lead, Frank. X. Shaw, provided some rare insight into the subscriber numbers for Xbox Game Pass, the nifty game subscription service for Xbox One consoles and Windows 10 PCs. Bolstered by “record engagement” this quarter, Xbox Game Pass hurdled over the 10 million user mark, Shaw stated in a Twitter post.

That’s

Source: Hot Hardware – Xbox Game Pass Hurdles 10 Million User Mark Amid Call For Social Distancing

Microsoft's Visual Studio Online Code Editor is Now Visual Studio Codespaces and Gets a Price Drop

About a year ago, Microsoft launched Visual Studio Online, its online code editor based on the popular Visual Studio Code project. It’)s basically a full code editor and hosted environment that lives in your browser. Today, the company announced that it is changing the name of this service to Visual Studio Codespaces. It’s also dropping the price of the service by more than 50% and giving developers the option to run it on relatively low-performance virtual machines that will start at $0.08 per hour. In today’s announcement, Microsoft’s Scott Hanselman points out that the company learned that most developers who used Visual Studio Online thought of it as being much more than simply an editor in the browser.

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Source: Slashdot – Microsoft’s Visual Studio Online Code Editor is Now Visual Studio Codespaces and Gets a Price Drop

How to Unlock Your iPhone Even Faster While Wearing a Face Mask

I’ll start with the good news. If you’re using Face ID on your iPhone or iPad Pro, and it’s driving your crazy that you can’t unlock your device while you’re wearing a face mask, worry not. With the upcoming release of iOS 13.5, Apple is making this process slightly easier.

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Source: LifeHacker – How to Unlock Your iPhone Even Faster While Wearing a Face Mask

Apple and Google's Coronavirus Efforts Remind Us How Little Control We Have Over Our Health Data

joint poll between University of Maryland researchers and the Washington Post released this week found most consumers, for a variety of reasons, are either unable or unwilling to download the proposed contact-tracing tech Apple and Google are developing to track the spread of the coronavirus. While some consumers in…

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Source: Gizmodo – Apple and Google’s Coronavirus Efforts Remind Us How Little Control We Have Over Our Health Data

NASA awards lunar lander contracts to Blue Origin, Dynetics—and Starship

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Source: Ars Technica – NASA awards lunar lander contracts to Blue Origin, Dynetics—and Starship