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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Numerical simulations of debris drift from the Great Japan Tsunami of 2011 and their verification with observational reports

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2018 109 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nikolai Maximenko Nikolai Maximenko Nikolai Maximenko Nikolai Maximenko Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Nikolai Maximenko Nikolai Maximenko Amy MacFadyen, Masafumi Kamachi, Amy MacFadyen, Masafumi Kamachi, Nikolai Maximenko Jan Hafner, Nikolai Maximenko Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Amy MacFadyen, Amy MacFadyen, Jan Hafner, Nikolai Maximenko Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Jan Hafner, Nikolai Maximenko Nikolai Maximenko

Summary

Researchers used five ocean circulation models to simulate the drift of debris released by the 2011 Great Japan Tsunami, finding that windage differences caused debris to 'stratify' across Pacific pathways — with high-windage items reaching North America within the first year while low-windage items accumulated in the North Pacific subtropical gyre. Model results were validated against real-world observations of tsunami-lost vessels found along the North American coast.

Study Type Environmental

A suite of five ocean models is used to simulate the movement of floating debris generated by the Great Japan Tsunami of 2011. This debris was subject to differential wind and wave-induced motion relative to the ambient current (often termed "windage") which is a function of the shape, size, and buoyancy of the individual debris items. Model solutions suggest that during the eastward drift across the North Pacific the debris became "stratified" by the wind so that objects with different windages took different paths: high windage items reached North America in large numbers the first year, medium windage items recirculated southwest toward Hawaii and Asia, and low windage items collected in the Subtropical Gyre, primarily in the so-called "garbage patch" area located northeast of Hawaii and known for high concentrations of microplastics. Numerous boats lost during the tsunami were later observed at sea and/or found on the west coast of North America: these observations are used to determine optimal windage values for scaling the model solutions. The initial number of boats set adrift during the tsunami is estimated at about 1000, while about 100 boats are projected to still float in year 2018 with an e-folding decay of 2 to 8 years.

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