Arctic Ocean: An Alarming Report about the Amount of Trash
This is a summary from Maya Weeks with the Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation reporting on the amount of trash collecting on the shores of the Arctic Ocean.
Published 8 years ago, updated 6 years ago
Today we cleaned up the beach at Sørvika in Murchisonfjorden in Nordaustlandet.
During this one foggy morning, we collected 41 kilos of marine debris in an hour. Then Ryo, Birgit, and I sorted all the trash and weighed it on deck: ropes from fishing and shipping, plastic packaging, shotgun shell cartridges, a toothbrush head, bottle caps, a toy dog’s foot, two pieces of artificial grass, shoes, paper goods, hygienic items, even plastic nurdles (plastic in its pre-production form). Since a lot of the debris was microplastics, sorting the six bags of trash meant that we were picking through piles of feathers and seaweed to remove the plastics, and then throwing the feathers and seaweed back into the sea.
Photo of bags of trash collected
Of course, cleanups are not nearly as useful as preventing plastic pollution at the source. No matter how many cleanups we do, if plastics continue to be used once and thrown away, soon we won’t even be able to clean up our beaches.
Learn more about our Global Microplastics Initiative and other Adventure Scientists projects on our website, the Field Notes blog, and by following us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Maya Weeks
Microplastics Adventure Scientist
www.adventurescience.org [BROKENLINK]
Related to following destinations: USA