0
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 Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Nanoplastics measurements in Northern and Southern Polar Ice

2022 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Helle Astrid Kjær, Helle Astrid Kjær, Thomas Röckmann, Thomas Röckmann, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Paul Vallelonga, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Paul Vallelonga, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Thomas Röckmann, Thomas Röckmann, Jean‐Louis Tison Jean‐Louis Tison Thomas Röckmann, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Thomas Röckmann, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Thomas Röckmann, Thomas Röckmann, Thomas Röckmann, Thomas Röckmann, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Dušan Materić, Rupert Holzinger, Rupert Holzinger, Thomas Röckmann, Rupert Holzinger, Thomas Röckmann, Dušan Materić, Jean‐Louis Tison

Summary

Researchers measured nanoplastics in ice cores from both the Arctic and Antarctic, confirming that even the most remote polar regions contain plastic nanoparticles. This finding shows that nanoplastics have reached every corner of the planet through atmospheric and oceanic transport.

<p>It has been established that various anthropogenic contaminants have already reached all the world’s pristine locations, including the polar regions. While some of those contaminants, such as lead and soot, are decreasing in the environment, thanks to international regulations, other novel contaminants emerge. Plastic pollution has been shown as a durable novel pollutant, and, since recently, smaller and smaller plastics particles have been identified in various environments (air, water and soil). Considerable research already exists measuring the plastics in the 5 mm to micrometre size range (microplastics). However, far less is known about the plastics debris that fragmented to the sub-micrometre size (nanoplastics). As these small particles are light, it is expected that they have already reached the most remote places on Earth, e.g. transported across the globe by air movement. In this work, we used a novel method based on Thermal Desorption – Proton Transfer Reaction – Mass Spectrometry (TD-PTR-MS) to detect and measure nanoplastics of different types in the water sampled from a Greenland firn core (T2015-A5) and a sea ice core from Antarctica. We identify polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polystyrene (PS), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and Tire wear nanoparticles in the 14 m deep Greenland firn core and PE, PP and PET in sea ice from Antarctica. Nanoplastics mass concentrations were on average 13.2 ng/mL for Greenland firn samples and 52.3 ng/mL for Antarctic sea ice. We further discuss the possible sources of nanoplastics that we found at these remote locations, which likely involve complex processes of plastic circulation (emission from both land and sea surface, atmospheric and marine circulation).</p>

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper