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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Direct Evidence That Microplastics Are Transported to the Deep Sea by Turbidity Currents

Environmental Science & Technology 2025 18 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ian Kane, Euan Soutter, Edward Keavney, Edward Keavney, Peng Chen, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Michael Clare Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Furu Mienis, Michael Clare Michael Clare Ian Kane, Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Furu Mienis, Ian Kane, Euan Soutter, Euan Soutter, Euan Soutter, Peng Chen, Michael Clare Ian Kane, Michael Clare Michael Clare Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare Euan Soutter, Euan Soutter, Roy A. Wogelius, Roy A. Wogelius, Furu Mienis, Michael Clare Furu Mienis, Roy A. Wogelius, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Roy A. Wogelius, Furu Mienis, Edward Keavney, Edward Keavney, Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Furu Mienis, Furu Mienis, Furu Mienis, Euan Soutter, Euan Soutter, Michael Clare Ian Kane, Ian Kane, Michael Clare Michael Clare Michael Clare

Summary

Researchers provided the first direct field evidence that underwater sediment avalanches, called turbidity currents, transport microplastics from shallow waters into the deep sea through submarine canyons. By monitoring water flow and sampling the seafloor, they confirmed that these natural events carry significant quantities of microfibers and plastic fragments to deep ocean environments. The discovery helps explain how microplastic pollution reaches even the most remote parts of the ocean floor.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics pervade the global seafloor, yet the mechanisms by which this pollutant is increasingly transported to the deep sea remain unclear. Fast-moving sediment avalanches (called turbidity currents) are hypothesized to efficiently transport microplastics into the deep sea. However, while this has been inferred from field sampling of the seafloor, it has never been demonstrated outside of a laboratory setting. Here, we provide direct field-scale evidence that turbidity currents in submarine canyons not only transport globally significant volumes of mineral and organic matter into the deep sea but also carry large quantities of anthropogenic particles, including microfibers and microplastic fragments. In situ hydrodynamic monitoring, coupled with direct sampling of the seafloor and material suspended by turbidity currents, reveals that even a submarine canyon whose head lies hundreds of kilometers from land acts as an efficient conduit to flush sediment and pollutants from the continental shelf to water depths greater than 3200 m. Frequent and fast turbidity currents supply oxygen and nutrients that sustain deep-sea biodiversity and fishing grounds in, and adjacent to, such canyons. Our study therefore confirms that these biodiversity hotspots are colocated with microplastic hotspots, indicating that the more than 5000 land-detached canyons worldwide can be important but previously unproven conveyors of anthropogenic pollution to the deep sea.

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