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Chemicals of Emerging Arctic Concern in north-western Spitsbergen snow: Distribution and sources

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 21 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Marianna D'Amico, Roland Kallenborn, Federico Scoto, Andrea Gambaro, Jean‐Charles Gallet, Andrea Spolaor, Marco Vecchiato

Summary

Researchers analyzed snowpack in north-western Spitsbergen, in the Arctic, for chemicals commonly found in personal care products such as fragrances, UV filters, and BPA. They detected these emerging contaminants across multiple sampling sites and seasons, suggesting long-range atmospheric transport from populated areas. The findings indicate that even remote Arctic environments are being contaminated by everyday consumer product chemicals.

Personal care products contain chemicals that are considered of emerging concern in the Arctic. In this study, a selected group of personal care products was investigated in the snowpack on north-western Spitsbergen. We report a preliminary study on the spatial and seasonal distribution of 13 ingredients commonly found in personal care products, including fragrance materials, UV filters, BHT and BPA. Possible sources and deposition processes are discussed. Experimental analyses utilizing GC-MS/MS, were complemented with outputs from the HYSPLIT transport and dispersion model. The results reveal the presence of all selected compounds in the snow, both in proximity to and distant from the research village of Ny-Ålesund. For some of these chemicals this is the first time their presence is reported in snow in Svalbard. These chemicals show different partitioning behaviours between the particulate and dissolved phases, affecting their transport and deposition processes. Additionally, concentrations of certain compounds vary across different altitudes. It is observed the relevance of long-range atmospheric transport during winter at most sites, and, regardless of the proximity to human settlements, snow concentrations can be influenced by long-distance sources. This study highlights the need for detailed information on CEACs' physical-chemical properties, considering their potential impact on fresh and marine waters during the snowmelt under climate change.

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