Medical News Microplastics in the Arctic and the Alps may have blown in on the wind

Medical News Microplastics in the Arctic and the Alps may have blown in on the wind

by Emily Smith
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Medical News

Environment

14 August 2019

By New Scientist staff and Press Association

Microplastics found in the Alps are carried on the wind and flushed to the ground with snowWerner Dieterich/Getty
Tiny particles of plastic have been found in high concentrations in snow samples from Helgoland, Bavaria, Bremen, the Swiss Alps and the Arctic – even places as remote as the island of Svalbard and in snow on drifting ice floes. These microplastics may have drifted there on wind currents.
“It’s readily apparent that the majority of the microplastic in the snow comes from the air,” says Melanie Bergmann at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Germany. She added that this raises questions about how much plastic humans are inhaling.
The team melted samples of snow and poured them through a filter and then examined the trapped residue with an infrared microscope. Depending on the type of plastic, different wavelengths of the infrared light are absorbed and reflected.

They found the highest concentrations of these plastics in samples near a rural road in Bavaria, which contained various types of rubber used in things like car tyres. In the Arctic they primarily found nitrile rubber, acrylates and paint. These microplastics are about the same size as grains of pollen, which have been shown to be transported by air from near the equator up to the Arctic.
Bergmann and her colleagues say a major portion of the microplastic in Europe, and even more in the Arctic, comes from the atmosphere and snow. This additional transport route could also explain the high amounts of microplastic that we’ve found in the Arctic sea ice and the deep sea in previous studies, she says.
“Once we’ve determined that large quantities of microplastic can also be transported by the air, it naturally raises the question as to whether and how much plastic we’re inhaling,” says Bergmann.
Journal reference: Science Advances, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aax1157

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