Microplastics in the Great Lakes:  Becoming Benthic
Phoenix,  Arizona, USA: From the Great Pacific garbage patch to inland  rivers, plastics are among the most widespread contaminants on Earth.  Microplastics—particles  of plastic smaller than five millimeters—are especially pervasive. As they  build up in Earth’s waters, microplastics are also becoming a permanent part of  the planet’s sedimentary layers. 
Now, using the Great Lakes as a  laboratory, sedimentary petrologist Patricia Corcoran and her students at the  University of Western Ontario are studying the behavior of microplastics as a  geologic phenomenon. 
What are the main sources of  microplastics to Great Lakes sediment? What factors influence their  distribution, and where do they concentrate? To explore these questions, and  shed light on implications such as which animals may be at risk from  microplastics, Corcoran’s team has analyzed offshore and nearshore sediment  samples from Lakes Huron, Ontario, Erie, and St. Clair, and their tributaries.  Abundances were as high as 4270 microplastics particles per kilogram of dry  weight sediment in lake sediment, and up to 2444 microplastic particles per  kilogram in river sediment. 
The team  found that the more organic debris in the sample, the more microplastics.  Benthic microplastics—those  incorporated into lake bottom sediments—were also more abundant near high  population areas, which are also associated with plastics industry locations. 
Surprisingly, not all plastic fibers  found in benthic samples were plastic after all. “When we chemically analyzed  fibers only 33% were plastic. The others materials like dyed cotton or  cellulose,” Corcoran says. “So we can’t assume that every fiber we see under  the microscope is plastic.” 
Corcoran’s  team also sampled pellets (microplastics about the size of a lentil) from 66  beaches across all five Great Lakes. They found a total of 12, 974 pellets over  660 square meters of beach, about equivalent to an eighth the area of an  American football field.  
Except for the two beaches containing the most  pellets, they found little relationship between population density or industry  and number of pellets, says Corcoran. Instead, pellets were most concentrated  near tributaries. “In other words,” she says, “rivers and creeks are the main  pathways used by pellets to reach the lakes.” 
Burial of microplastics in lake and river sediment  is just one way Corcoran has explored how plastics are becoming part of Earth’s  future rock record. She’s also investigated anthropogenic stones on a Hawaiian  beach, which she and colleagues called “plastiglomerate.” 
The Great Lakes study will be presented by Sara  Belontz of the University of Western Ontario, on Tuesday, 24 Sept., at 2:30  p.m., in Room 224A, North Building of the Phoenix Convention Center. 
 
Paper  227-5: Anthropogenic Grains:  Microplastics in Benthic Compartments of the Great Lakes Watershed 
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2019AM/webprogram/Paper333149.html 
Contact: Dr.  Patricia Corcoran
Associate  Professor and Department Chair
Department of  Earth Sciences
University of  Western Ontario
London, ON,  Canada N6A 5B7
pcorcor@uwo.ca
The Geological Society of America, founded in  1888, is a scientific society with 22,000 members from academia, government,  and industry in more than 100 countries. Through its meetings, publications,  and programs, GSA enhances the professional growth of its members and promotes  the geosciences in the service of humankind. Headquartered in Boulder,  Colorado, GSA encourages cooperative research among earth, life, planetary, and  social scientists, fosters public dialogue on geoscience issues, and supports  all levels of earth-science education.
https://www.  geosociety.org
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