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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 Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Anthropogenic contamination of tap water, beer, and sea salt

PLoS ONE 2018 1184 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Elizabeth V. Wattenberg, Mary Kosuth, Elizabeth V. Wattenberg, Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Mary Kosuth, Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Elizabeth V. Wattenberg, Elizabeth V. Wattenberg, Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason Sherri A. Mason

Summary

Researchers tested tap water from 14 countries, beer from the Great Lakes region, and commercial sea salt for microplastic contamination and found anthropogenic particles in the majority of all samples. Tap water was contaminated in 81% of samples tested, with fibers being the most common particle type. The study highlights that microplastics are present in everyday foods and beverages, contributing to routine human exposure through multiple dietary sources.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution has been well documented in natural environments, including the open waters and sediments within lakes and rivers, the open ocean and even the air, but less attention has been paid to synthetic polymers in human consumables. Since multiple toxicity studies indicate risks to human health when plastic particles are ingested, more needs to be known about the presence and abundance of anthropogenic particles in human foods and beverages. This study investigates the presence of anthropogenic particles in 159 samples of globally sourced tap water, 12 brands of Laurentian Great Lakes beer, and 12 brands of commercial sea salt. Of the tap water samples analyzed, 81% were found to contain anthropogenic particles. The majority of these particles were fibers (98.3%) between 0.1-5 mm in length. The range was 0 to 61 particles/L, with an overall mean of 5.45 particles/L. Anthropogenic debris was found in each brand of beer and salt. Of the extracted particles, over 99% were fibers. After adjusting for particles found in lab blanks for both salt and beer, the average number of particles found in beer was 4.05 particles/L with a range of 0 to 14.3 particles/L and the average number of particles found in each brand of salt was 212 particles/kg with a range of 46.7 to 806 particles/kg. Based on consumer guidelines, our results indicate the average person ingests over 5,800 particles of synthetic debris from these three sources annually, with the largest contribution coming from tap water (88%).

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