A number of studies, for example, have documented microplastics in rain falling all over the world — even in remote, unpopulated regions. For one 2020 analysis in the journal Science, researchers documented microplastics in rainwater that fell on several national parks and wilderness areas in the Western US. Most of the plastic bits were microfibers, such as those shed from polyester sweaters or carpeting on the floor of a car. The researchers estimated that more than 1,000 metric tons of plastic from the atmosphere fall on parks in the West each year, including both as rainfall and as dry dust. That’s equivalent to roughly 120 to 300 million plastic water bottles, according to the study.
Comment on We got rid of acid rain. Now something scarier is falling from the sky.
Flagstaff@programming.dev 1 day agoPFAS ≠ microplastics! PFAS is way worse and can clog up your body for the duration of its lifespan, hence “forever chemicals”…
Kolanaki@pawb.social 1 day ago
Flagstaff@programming.dev 1 day ago
Yes, that’s the second half of the quoted portion. What about the first? The point is that it’s all bad and not any better than acid rain.
MBech@feddit.dk 1 day ago
You seem to know more about this than I do, so what’s the damage? Like, it stays in the body, which is all I’ve heard multiple times, but is that it? Like it just stays there and nothing happens? Does it cause cancer or organ failure?
'cause if it doesn’t actually do any damage, then sure, it sucks that we’re poluting everything, but it wouldn’t really be the worst type of polution we’re currently ignoring.
xep@discuss.online 1 day ago
They are, at the very least, endocrine disrupters: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7926449/
Also see: www.endocrine.org/topics/edc/…/pfas
Flagstaff@programming.dev 1 day ago
- Microplastics and our health: What the science says
- Microplastics Everywhere | Harvard Health Magazine