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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 Sign in to save

Forty-year pollution history of microplastics in the largest marginal sea of the western Pacific

Geochemical Perspectives Letters 2020 63 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.
M. Chen, S. Dasgupta, S. Dasgupta, S. Dasgupta, Xiaotong Peng M. Chen, M. Chen, Mengran Du, Xiaotong Peng Xiaotong Peng Xiaotong Peng S. Chen, Hongzhou Xu, Ai-Min Jin, Hongzhou Xu, S. Chen, Ai-Min Jin, Hongzhou Xu, Hongzhou Xu, M. Chen, S. Dasgupta, Kaiwen Ta, Ai-Min Jin, S. Chen, J. Li, Ai-Min Jin, S. Chen, Mengran Du, S. Dasgupta, Hongzhou Xu, Kaiwen Ta, Kaiwen Ta, J. Li, Mengran Du, Hongzhou Xu, Mengran Du, Mengran Du, J. Li, Kaiwen Ta, Hongzhou Xu, Xiaotong Peng Kaiwen Ta, Xiaotong Peng

Summary

Researchers reconstructed a forty-year pollution history of microplastics in the northern South China Sea using lead-210 dated sediment cores, finding that contamination began in the 1980s and accelerated dramatically around 1998, tracking the region's rapid industrialization and population growth.

Study Type Environmental

Marine sediments have been considered to be a major sink for microplastics, yet the pollution history of microplastics recorded in these sediments remains poorly understood. Using a combination of 210 Pb chronology and quantification of microplastics in undisturbed sediment cores, here we established the forty-year pollution history of microplastics in the northern South China Sea (SCS), the largest marginal sea of the western Pacific. We found that the pollution of microplastics in the northern SCS commenced in the 1980s. A dramatic increase of microplastic abundance in about 1998 marked an important breakpoint for microplastic contamination. Since then, microplastic abundances in the sediments have continued to increase and reached the highest level in 2018. This was well in line with the increasing trend of plastic output in the local industries. Reconstructing regional pollution history further revealed the shift of microplastic depocentres in the northern SCS over the past forty years. We estimated that the microplastic abundances in the sediments at nearshore stations will double by 2028. Our results provide the first example of the reconstruction of microplastic pollution history in marine sediments and new insights into how microplastics contaminated the marginal sea.

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