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Four BILLION plastic particles from all over the world are found on the beaches of a remote Pacific island 3,000 miles from the nearest continent

Acornz

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Four BILLION plastic particles from all over the world are found on the beaches of a remote Pacific island 3,000 miles from the nearest continent​

  • Natural History Museum researchers visited the remote Henderson Island twice
  • They found billions of pieces of plastic within the sand on the Pacific island
  • None of the plastic came from the uninhabited island or local inhabited islands
  • Microplastics had increased by an order of magnitude between 2015 and 2019 from just over two grams per square metre in 2015 to 23 grams per square metre
Billions of pieces of plastic have washed up in the sand of a remote Pacific island from all over the world, despite being 3,000 miles from the nearest continent.

Researchers from the Natural History Museum discovered the plastic in the top two inches of sand on Henderson Island, one of four that form the Pitcairn Islands.

The discovery shocked the team, who first visited the uninhabited island which is 3,000 miles from South America, in 2015 to examine the prevalence of plastic.

They returned in 2019 and found the amount of plastic increased from 2 grams per square metre when they checked in 2015 to more than 23 grams per square metre.

They found the island's three beaches covered in litter and debris that had travelled hundreds of miles via powerful ocean currents from every part of the Earth.

Billions of pieces of plastic have washed up in the sand of a remote Pacific island from all over the world, despite being 3,000 miles from the nearest continent

Billions of pieces of plastic have washed up in the sand of a remote Pacific island from all over the world, despite being 3,000 miles from the nearest continent

Henderson Island is a remote landmass as part of hte Pitcairn Islands and is more than 3,000 miles from the nearest continent


Henderson Island is a remote landmass as part of the Pitcairn Islands and is more than 3,000 miles from the nearest continent

Dr Alex Bond, senior author of the study, said a lot of the rubbish found on the island - within two inches of the sand - wasn't new.

The team discovered toys that were first released in the 80s and 90s among the pollution on the beach, said Bond, adding that 'plastic can stay in the ocean for a long time and then end up on a beach.'

This was disturbing as Henderson Island was believed to be one of the last remaining pristine places on Earth free from human contact.

To such an extent its remoteness affording it a UNESCO World Heritage Site status.

'Pitcairn is the only island inhabited with a human population but none of the trash comes from there,' explains Dr Bond.

'We found pieces of plastic that were from Europe, Africa, North America, South America and Asia. They get into the oceans and are bought here.'

The sources of plastic pollution vary greatly from fishing practices, agriculture and human activities on beaches.

However, a lot of the plastic pollution comes from leaks in waste disposal systems. Wastewater disposals are bad at filtering out microplastics before releasing wastewater into waterways that connect to the oceans.

They found the island's three beaches covered in litter and debris that had travelled hundreds of miles via powerful ocean currents from every part of the Earth


They found the island's three beaches covered in litter and debris that had travelled hundreds of miles via powerful ocean currents from every part of the Earth

Researchers from the Natural History Museum discovered the plastic in the top two inches of sand on Henderson Island, one of four that form the Pitcairn Islands

Researchers from the Natural History Museum discovered the plastic in the top two inches of sand on Henderson Island, one of four that form the Pitcairn Islands

Dr Bond said plastic pollution was a worldwide issue and needs to be dealt with on a cooperative and global level.

'I think we're going to slowly see a shift from cleaning up plastics to treating it like other contaminants like lead and mercury, where we know they're going to persist in the environment for millennia.

'Then it'll be how we go about managing it that becomes important.'

The study Assessing plastic size distribution and quantity on a remote island in the South Pacific is published in the Marine Pollution Bulletin.
 

LavenderLush

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Abolish Capitalism. Green Capitalism won't save us, Capitalism is the crisis.
 

EarthaKITT

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A few practices I adopted are
1. Reusable bag
2. Buy glass vs plastic.
3. Always cut up plastic that holds cans/bottles. Animals get caught in that often.
4. Discard trash I come across when out in nature.

There are great videos on YouTube on minimal waste living that we all can incorporate.
 

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