Dive Against Debris Data Submission
ADS221 - Pointe Des Cascades
18 June, 2017
- Team Leader
- Didier Duprat
- Number of Participants
- 4
- Total Debris Collected
- 34 lbs (measured)
45.33125, -73.968028
Survey Information
- Location Name
- ADS221 - Pointe Des Cascades
- Organization/Dive Centre
- City
- Montreal
- Country
- Canada
- Date
- 18 June, 2017
- Survey Duration
- 45 Minutes
- GPS Coordinates
- Latitude: 45.33125
Longitude: -73.968028
- Weather Conditions
-
Sunny, no wind.
- Survey Depth Range
- 1–6 meters
- Area Surveyed
- 300 m2
- Dominant Substrate
- silt
- Ecosystem
- Canal
- Wave Conditions
- Calm (glassy to rippled) for waves 0 – 0.1 meter high
Survey Photos
Debris Items Collected
plastic materials collected | |
---|---|
Beverage Bottles: 2 Litres Or More (plastic) | 1 |
Caps & Lids (plastic) | 2 |
Fishing: Line | 1 |
Plastic Fragments | 3 |
Cigarette Filters | 1 |
Rope (plastic/nylon) | 1 |
glass materials collected | |
---|---|
Glass & Ceramic Fragments | 147 |
Beverage Bottles (glass) | 4 |
metal materials collected | |
---|---|
Beverage Cans (aluminium) | 2 |
Cars & Car Parts | 1 |
Metal Fragments | 24 |
Additional Information
plastic
metal
glass
Comments and Feedback
Very proud of the team. They did this survey during their Advanced Open Water Course. Fortunately the visibility (5-10m) was much better than last time, so we could spot small pieces of glass and metal more easily. We saw less plastic, as we collected most of it in May. I encourage instructors to include the DAD dive into the AOW course. My students made significant progress in mastering their buoyancy and they were very proud of what they did. They now think as Project Aware Divers :-)
To Project Aware Team: thank you for this program. It makes our teaching even more interesting.