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If you're one of the countless tourists planning to hit up a Hawaiian island this summer, this story will certainly alarm you.
Honolulu Magazine reports that more than 20,000 pieces of marine debris were found on Hawaiian shorelines during an aerial survey conducted last year. The study was undertaken by the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources and the University of Hawaii at Mānoa’s Hawaii Coral Reef Initiative.
Plastic comprised the bulk of the litter, as well as fishing, boating gear, and even sea vessels and abandoned shipping containers. Tires, floats, and buoys appeared to have been discarded by humans directly into the water and on the beach.
Niihau was the biggest offender, with 38% of the total litter found on there Oahu had the least amount of waste, comprising 5% of the total. The study also determined that the garbage had little connection with the 2011 Japanese tsunami, which had been thought to have carried waste to the island. It seems that the real problem is human carelessness.
These photos document the extent of the damage.
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Plastic items comprise much of the trash.
Photo: Paul McCormick/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

Glass bottles dot the once-scenic coastline.
Photo: Roberta Olenick/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

The sun sets on a littered beach.
Photo: John Lund/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

Discarded fishing gear is also to blame for the state's trash problem.
Photo: Phil Augustavo/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

The Department of Land & Natural Resources hopes mapping out the trash accumulation will help it find more effective ways to prevent and discourage littering and carelessness.
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The island of Niihau was the most littered, with nearly 8,000 pieces of garbage found on its beaches.
Photo: Education Images/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

Plastic jugs and discarded life jackets end up as litter.
Photo: Enrique R Aguirre Aves/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

The trash poses a threat to marine life and the local environment.
Photo: David Fleetham/Getty Images.Clik here to view.

Garbage is also filtering into the sea.
Photo: Robert Cravens/Getty Images.Like what you see? How about some more R29 goodness, right here?
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