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Microplastics in sea coastal zone: Lessons learned from the Baltic amber

Environmental Pollution 2017 109 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Irina Chubarenko, Natalia Stepanova

Summary

Researchers used the well-documented coastal migration behavior of Baltic amber — which shares density properties with common plastics — to develop a hypothesis explaining how microplastic particles cycle between beaches and underwater slopes under stormy conditions, eventually fragmenting into smaller pieces transported to deeper depositional zones.

Polymers

Baltic amber, adored for its beauty already in Homer's Odyssey (ca. 800 B.C.E), has its material density close to that of wide-spread plastics like polyamide, polystyrene, or acrylic. Migrations of amber stones in the sea and their massive washing ashore have been monitored by Baltic citizens for ages. Based on the collected information, we present the hypothesis on the behaviour of microplastic particles in sea coastal zone. Fresh-to-strong winds generate surface waves, currents and roll-structures, whose joint effect washes ashore from the underwater slope both amber stones and plastics - and carries them back to the sea in a few days. Analysis of underlying hydrophysical processes suggests that sea coastal zone under stormy winds plays a role of a mill for plastics, and negatively buoyant pieces seem to repeatedly migrate between beaches and underwater slopes until they are broken into small enough fragments that can be transported by currents to deeper areas and deposited out of reach of stormy waves. Direct observations on microplastics migrations are urged to prove the hypothesis.

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