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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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Microplastic inventory in sediment profile: A case study of Golden Horn Estuary, Sea of Marmara

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2021 41 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Murat Belivermiş, Önder Kılıç Önder Kılıç Ercan Sıkdokur, Murat Belivermiş, Murat Belivermiş, Gülşen Altuğ, Nihal Doğruöz Güngör, Önder Kılıç Murat Belivermiş, Murat Belivermiş, Murat Belivermiş, Narin Sezer, Ercan Sıkdokur, Ercan Sıkdokur, Narin Sezer, Narin Sezer, Narin Sezer, Önder Kılıç Ercan Sıkdokur, Nihal Doğruöz Güngör, Gülşen Altuğ, Narin Sezer, Önder Kılıç Narin Sezer, Önder Kılıç

Summary

Researchers analyzed a 105 cm sediment core from the Golden Horn Estuary using radiodating, finding that over 90% of accumulated microplastics were buried below 15 cm, that MP pollution predated 1950, and peaked in the 1980s coinciding with peak global plastic production.

Study Type Environmental

Assessment of microplastics (MPs) in sediment cores is necessary to unveil global plastic pollution since most of the plastic litter might have been stored in sediment columns. In the current study, MPs inventory was determined in a 105 cm sediment core, collected in the Golden Horn Estuary, Sea of Marmara. Radiodating of sediment profile by using naturally occurring Pb and fission product Cs allowed us to couple the retrospective of global MP production to sediment MPs inventory. More than 90% of total MPs inventory was found in the deep layer of the sediment column (below 15 cm). Small MPs (20-200 μm) were more abundant than large ones (200-4000 μm). Elevated concentrations of MPs were attributed to industrial and municipal effluent of Istanbul metropolitan. On a local scale, this study suggests that the Golden Horn Estuary was polluted with MPs before the 1950s, and the abundance of MPs reached a maximum in the 1980s. We also propose on a global scale that "the missing" plastics might have been buried in deep sediment and radiodating of sediment is useful to reveal their historical input records.

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