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Microplastic contamination of an unconfined groundwater aquifer in Victoria, Australia

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 244 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Julia E. Jaeger, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Subharthe Samandra, Julia E. Jaeger, Julia M. Johnston, Julia M. Johnston, Julia E. Jaeger, Julia E. Jaeger, Bob Symons, Amanda Ellis, Shay Xie, Bob Symons, Bob Symons, Julia E. Jaeger, Amanda Ellis, Julia E. Jaeger, Bob Symons, Shay Xie, Bradley O. Clarke Bradley O. Clarke Bradley O. Clarke Julia E. Jaeger, Bob Symons, Shay Xie, Shay Xie, Julia E. Jaeger, Bob Symons, Shay Xie, Shay Xie, Matthew Currell, Julia E. Jaeger, Shay Xie, Bradley O. Clarke Julia E. Jaeger, Bradley O. Clarke Shay Xie, Amanda Ellis, Bradley O. Clarke Subharthe Samandra, Bradley O. Clarke Bradley O. Clarke Amanda Ellis, Bob Symons, Subharthe Samandra, Bob Symons, Amanda Ellis, Bradley O. Clarke Bradley O. Clarke Bradley O. Clarke Amanda Ellis, Bradley O. Clarke

Summary

Researchers found microplastic contamination in an unconfined groundwater aquifer in Victoria, Australia, providing the first evidence that microplastics can penetrate capped alluvial sedimentary aquifers and contaminate subsurface water systems.

This is the first study to show microplastics contamination in an alluvial sedimentary aquifer that has been capped from the atmosphere. Microplastics are often reported in biotic and abiotic environments, but little is known about their occurrence in groundwater systems. In this study, eight of the most commonly found microplastics in the environment (polyethylene, PE; polystyrene, PS; polypropylene, PP; polyvinyl chloride, PVC; polyethylene terephthalate, PET; polycarbonate, PC; polymethylmethacrylate, PMMA; and polyamide, PA) were analysed in triplicate groundwater samples (n = 21) from five sampling sites across seven capped groundwater monitoring bores from Bacchus Marsh (Victoria, Australia) using Agilent's novel Laser Direct Infra-Red (LDIR) imaging system. Microplastics were detected in all samples, with PE, PP, PS and PVC detected in all seven bores. The average size of the microplastics identified was 89 ± 55 μm (St.Dev.), ranging from 18 to 491 μm. The average number of microplastics detected across all sites was 38 ± 8 microplastics/L, ranging from 16 to 97 particles/L. PE and PVC in total contributed to 59% of the total sum of microplastics detected. PE was consistently detected in all seven bores (average: 11 particles/L), while PVC was more pronounced in a bore adjacent to a meat processor (52 particles/L) compared to that of its overall average of 12 particles/L. A statistically significant positive correlation was observed between PVC and PS (R = 0.934, p ≤0.001). As this study collected samples from capped groundwater bores, the most probable avenue for microplastics was permeation through soil. Therefore, to further understand the fate and transport of microplastics within a groundwater system, it is necessary to analyse a greater range of groundwater bores not only from Australia but throughout the world.

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