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Japan Tsunami: Flotsam Debris Reaches U.S. West Coast

12/15/11 05:11 PM ET   AP

PORT ANGELES, Wash. -- Some debris from the March tsunami in Japan has reached the West Coast.

The float was displayed at a Tuesday night presentation at Peninsula College by Seattle oceanographers Curtis Ebbesmeyer and Jim Ingraham, consultants who produce the "Beachcombers Alert" newsletter.

Tons of debris from Japan will likely begin washing ashore in about a year, from California to southern Alaska, they said. Items that wash up may include portions of houses, boats, ships, furniture, portions of cars and just about anything else that floats, he said.

That could include parts of human bodies, Ebbesmeyer said. Athletic shoes act as floats.

Flotsam in a current travels an average of 7 mph, but it can move as much as 20 mph if it has a large area exposed to the wind, Ebbesmeyer said. The latest float sits well atop the water, has a shallow draft and is lightweight. Similar floats have been found on Vancouver Island in British Columbia.

Models show currents could pull some Japanese tsunami debris into the Strait of Juan de Fuca as far as Port Townsend.

"All debris should be treated with a great reverence and respect," Ebbesmeyer said.

If the debris has any kind of identifiable marking, such as numbers or Japanese writing, it may be traceable, Ebbesmeyer said. Families in Japan are waiting to hear of any items that may have been associated with their loved ones.

Ebbesmeyer is retired from a career that included tracking icebergs, the 1989 Exxon Valdes oil spill and Puget Sound currents that affect sewage outflows. He wrote the 2009 book, "Flotsametrics and the Floating World: How a Man's Obsession with runaway Sneakers and Rubber Ducks Revolutionized Ocean Science."

Ingram has retired from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, where he created computer models of ocean currents.

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PORT ANGELES, Wash. -- Some debris from the March tsunami in Japan has reached the West Coast. The float was displayed at a Tuesday night presentation at Peninsula College by Seattle oceanographers C...
PORT ANGELES, Wash. -- Some debris from the March tsunami in Japan has reached the West Coast. The float was displayed at a Tuesday night presentation at Peninsula College by Seattle oceanographers C...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anne Mccormick
10:27 AM on 12/18/2011
well, we all knew this stuff would be coming our way
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onasphere
Radical Centrist
01:19 PM on 12/17/2011
I build boat docks all over the state of Washington for a living. I expect to see a lot of this material. Back when I was a kid, Japanese fishermen used colorful glass balls as floats for fishing nets, and we would find them on the California coast if we got to the beach earlier than anyone else.
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11:31 AM on 12/17/2011
Notes from recent Beachcomber Alert (http://beachcombersalert.blogspot.com/)... on December 5, 2011, Gene Woodwick and I met with representatives at the Japanese Consulate in Seattle seeking to develop a plan to deal with the immense debris field. Five stages came to mind: 1. Treat debris as a crash scene; 2. Call the police, check radioactivity; 3. Remove debris to safe sites; 4. Inspect debris for mementoes; and 5. Notify loved ones in Japan.
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11:09 AM on 12/17/2011
"Conscientious Beachcombing" is the title of a LinkedIn discussion board for people in Hawaii and the West Coast of the United States to work together to voluntarily collect and return personal items to Japan for proper disposition when the tsunami flotsam begins coming ashore over the next few years. It is a new group, and just getting started... check it out if you have ideas, experience, or want to participate!
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11:00 AM on 12/17/2011
It would be great if we could return something, anything, that might help someone, probably a whole family finally put a dear loved-one to rest. And if we could return a few cherished possessions to a few people who have lost everything... maybe a tackle box belonging to a village fisherman, or a box of keepsakes, or a trunk of kimonos/quilts that have been in the family for many generations... This would mean so much to them...

Being raised/schooled in Japan, and living in a remote fishing village, I know that when just one "good tiding" happens to/for one person, it is shared widely, effectively lifting the spirits of the entire community! And theses folks could certainly use all the good tidings that comes thier way nowadays, especially if it helps relieve their immense emotional burdens... if only for a moment.

The Japanese people are an exceptionally kind, gracious, respectful people... I hope we will do what we can to help them recover from this disaster! My healing thoughts and prayers are going out to/for everyone who has been affected by a disaster in thier lives...
10:30 AM on 12/17/2011
This is a story that deserves great humanitarian reverence for the victims; not "trash talk" as reflected in some of the comments. The debris field did not come from the Pacific Gyre and should not be confused with the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. It is quite profoundly the remnants of a human tragedy, slowly drifting toward us in silence, just as silent as its youngest, most innocent victims who perished that day. It is carrying bits and pieces of the Tohoku victim’s lives; lives that were taken, lives that were lost, lives that are still missing and missed by those whom they loved and who loved them. The environmental threat we face as the tsunami debris field continues its somber journey toward the West Coast is all too real, and will require a monumental cleanup effort to avoid an even greater environmental catastrophe. But I beg you to consider, just for a moment, the victims of this horrific natural disaster. Don’t blame them for the garbage or the stream of junk coming our way. They didn’t litter our beaches, or intentionally dump debris or discharge waste into the ocean. If you must place blame, blame Mother Nature for her violent tantrum that sent these bits and pieces of people’s lives drifting toward us. As the debris field approaches, ask yourself: How many bits and pieces are there to your life? Let's try to raise awareness, enrich the conversation, and elevate this dialogue to something more constructive.
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11:16 AM on 12/17/2011
Hear, Hear... Bravo... great post!!!
12:03 PM on 12/17/2011
Thank you seanymph, you can read more on the Santa Cruz Patch: http://santacruz.patch.com/blog_posts/japan-tsunami-debris-field-bits-and-pieces-of-peoples-lives-2b1ea885
12:27 PM on 12/17/2011
Thank you for a post that beautifully - says it all!
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gemmax
10:23 AM on 12/17/2011
As the debris comes in and then back out and the cycle is repeated, There will be a lot of ruin along the beaches in the form of objects buried in the sand, etc. There will not be much walking the beach barefoot anymore. I don't doubt that it will be a huge mess. I also believe that for the most part, the people who own the property will have to clean it up themselves.
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paulthamec
Proud to have served this great nation ..
10:27 PM on 12/16/2011
There is one thing i hope some are doing for the japanese here in the U.S.and i wonder if there is any human remains in any of that stuff that has washed up on the shores..i know there is a lot of families who want and need closure....
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gemmax
09:25 AM on 12/17/2011
That is true. I hope that people will keep that in mind. One thing no one is mentioning is the danger of some of the large debris coming in. It does contain parts of houses, ships, boats, cars, etc. some large items. Depending upon where it comes in, it could be physically dangerous to those along the coast, particularly if comes in during storms where there would be little opportunity for the USA to divert or stop the largest items.
07:07 PM on 12/16/2011
No mention of nuclear waste in the flotsam. Oversight? Or fear of panic?
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gemmax
09:34 PM on 12/16/2011
Not from the Nuke plant disaster. That happened after the tsunami.
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12:38 PM on 12/17/2011
Not necessarily... beside the reactors water leaks into the local streams and ocean, much radioactive steam/paticulate matter was vented (continuously for months) into the atmosphere and carried westward by winds/clouds travelling faster than the flotsam. This material both immediately and eventually rained down onto/into the ocean (and onto floatsam) and eventually onto lands around the world via winds and the jet stream. The effects has/are being measured around the world. The cloud's radiation concentration is reported (by some) to be relatively low, and will likely become diluted over time and distance to miniscule levels (and seawater may enhance dilution). On the other hand, some reports claim that Fukishima contamination is now on par with the Chernobyl incident. It is also significant that most of the reports/reporting stations following this "cloud" suddently dissappeader all at onece in mid-March, as if the poweres-theat-be decided it was not something they wanted the population to know about... Humm, I wonder why?
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12:59 PM on 12/17/2011
Concentrations of cesium-137 in the ocean near Fukushima Daiichi peaked at 50 million times above normal, a study by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Society found. However, the study said that the radiation diluted rapidly and poses little or no danger to human and marine life. http://safetyfirst.nei.org/japan/japan-full-decontamination-efforts-will-begin-in-march/

Cloud secretly approaching France: http://www.connexionfrance.com/Radioactive-cloud-Fukushima-France-Meteo-France-simulation-IRSN-12592-view-article.html

http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/8551353-japans-radioactive-cloud-will-pass-over-france-and-europe-within-next-two-days

http://safetyfirst.nei.org/japan/contaminated-water-leaks-into-ocean-near-fukushima/

http://safetyfirst.nei.org/japan/japan-full-decontamination-efforts-will-begin-in-march/
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WeMustDoBetter09
Midori Futabatei NO MORE NUKES!
05:29 PM on 12/16/2011
"Run for your lives!!!"
That's what I feel like yelling....
"Duck and Cover!!"
"Hide under your desks!!!"
That's what I grew up with.
Lovely isn't it?
No More Nukes!
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
10:06 AM on 12/17/2011
That's essentially all you've yelled since day one.
I grew up with "Duck and Cover" too.
Besides that, we learned basic facts about radiological contamination, like:Cesium is water soluble.
So none of the debris is radioactive, not one bit.
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satellitejam
Wind, Sun, Water
11:07 AM on 12/17/2011
Are you saying that the only radioisotope that is formed in a fission reactor is cesium?
No other isotopes are present for any other reason? Is that what you are saying?

No plutonium, no uranium, no iodine, no strontium... just to name a few. Look up "fission products uranium 235" and see what you get.
03:34 PM on 12/16/2011
Think of the bright side. If the west coast starts to glow in the dark, think of the electricity they're going to save.
03:15 PM on 12/16/2011
There are so many comments about worry of radioactiv­ity from this debris. Everyone - the disaster at the nuclear power plant, first of all, was not in the area where the tsunami hit. It was in Fukushima, which is farther south (closer to the Tokyo area). The leaking was caused by the earthquake­, no the tsunami. Also, the leaking didn't become a factor until AFTER the tsunami hit, so nothing dragged out by the tsunami would have been affected by radiation. The plant's stability was compromise­d during the earthquake­, but the containmen­t buildings didn't start exploding and leaking until later. I was in Japan during the earthquake­/tsunami (just south of Tokyo), and the plant is closer to us than to the tsunami area.
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gemmax
09:27 PM on 12/16/2011
Hasn't the radiation already arrived sometime ago in the weather systems?
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ball4
9 ball side pocket
11:49 PM on 12/16/2011
Kudos, but she was IN JAPAN at the TIME: She knows all that happened including where all the radioactivity and levels went. She has no idea where her rental went though
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ball4
9 ball side pocket
11:50 PM on 12/16/2011
I need to check your passport please!
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hman570
01:50 PM on 12/16/2011
How sad all that stuff reaching the American West Coast. Hope that there are no bodys in that mess.