Abstract

It has been established that various anthropogenic contaminants have already reached all the world's pristine locations, including the polar regions. While some of those contaminants, such as lead and soot, are decreasing in the environment, thanks to international regulations, other novel contaminants emerge. Plastic pollution has been shown as a durable novel pollutant, and, since recently, smaller and smaller plastics particles have been identified in various environments (air, water and soil). Considerable research already exists measuring the plastics in the 5 mm to micrometre size range (microplastics). However, far less is known about the plastics debris that fragmented to the sub-micrometre size (nanoplastics). As these small particles are light, it is expected that they have already reached the most remote places on Earth, e.g. transported across the globe by air movement. In this work, we used a novel method based on Thermal Desorption – Proton Transfer Reaction – Mass Spectrometry (TD-PTR-MS) to detect and measure nanoplastics of different types in the water sampled from a Greenland firn core (T2015-A5) and a sea ice core from Antarctica. We identify polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polystyrene (PS), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and Tire wear nanoparticles in the 14 m deep Greenland firn core and PE, PP and PET in sea ice from Antarctica. Nanoplastics mass concentrations were on average 13.2 ng/mL for Greenland firn samples and 52.3 ng/mL for Antarctic sea ice. We further discuss the possible sources of nanoplastics that we found at these remote locations, which likely involve complex processes of plastic circulation (emission from both land and sea surface, atmospheric and marine circulation).

Highlights

  • It has recently been discovered that novel anthropogenic pollution which originate from fossil fuel polymer production are present in the air, water and soil

  • The average concentration of the nanoplastics found in the Greenland ice core was 13.2 ng/mL

  • Other data measured on the Continuous Flow Analysis (CFA) system for the core, averaged to the same sampling resolution of the plastics analysis are available in SD

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Summary

Introduction

It has recently been discovered that novel anthropogenic pollution which originate from fossil fuel polymer production are present in the air, water and soil. Polymers such as plastics have been commonly used since the middle of the last century with increasing yearly production that in 2019 reached 368 million tonnes worldwide (Geyer et al, 2017; PlasticsEurope, 2019, 2021). Most of the research and plastic inventories assessments have focussed on a fairly large size fraction of plastics – micro and macroplastics (pieces >5 mm), while nanoplastics have escaped attention because they are not detectable by the standard sampling and measuring protocols (Lindeque et al, 2020; Poulain et al, 2019; Wayman and Niemann, 2021)

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