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Scientists Say They'll Cut Back on Bottled Water After Learning 1 Liter Contains a Quarter of a Million Pieces of Plastic

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Plastic Makes Queers

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Jan 12, 2024, 3:56:47 AMJan 12
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A recent study analyzed three brands of bottled water and found a liter
contained an average of 240,000 pieces of plastic

The average liter of bottled water contains a quarter of a million pieces
of microscopically small plastic — and the researchers who made this
discovery have said that although it might not be dangerous, it’s made
them cut back on how much bottled water they drink.

With laser-powered microscopes, researchers analyzed samples from three
brands of bottled water and discovered that a liter contained 110,000 to
400,000 pieces of plastic per liter.

That’s an average of about 240,000 miniscule particles of plastic,
according to their findings, which were published in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.

While the brands analyzed weren’t identified, lead study author Naixin
Qian told NBC News that all three were common brands purchased at a major
national retailer.

The study authors said that 90% of the plastic pieces were not
microplastics, but nanoplastics, which are even smaller than
microplastics, and “believed to be more toxic since their smaller size
renders them much more amenable, compared to microplastics, to enter the
human body,” the study said.

As the National Library of Medicine explains, “Microplastics (MPs) are
plastic particles with a diameter less than 5 mm, while nanoplastics (NPs)
range in diameter from 1 to 100 or 1000 nm [nanometer].”

To put that size in perspective, there are 10 million nanometers in a
centimeter.

The researchers believed the plastic came from the bottle itself, as well
as from the filtration system used by the water companies — which is
intended to remove pollutants.

Study co-author Phoebe Stapleton, a toxicologist, told NBC News that the
potential health impact is “currently under review. We don’t know if it’s
dangerous or how dangerous.”

However, one study published in the National Library of Medicine said “the
results of cellular and animal experiments have shown that microplastics
can affect various systems in the human body, including the digestive,
respiratory, endocrine, reproductive, and immune systems.”

That study also noted that “microplastics can cause chemical toxicity,
which involves the absorption and accumulation of environmental toxins
such as heavy metals and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.”

Their findings have made the researchers say they’re cutting back on
bottled water: Stapleton told NBC News that she’s relying on filtered tap
water now, and her colleague Wei Min, a chemist, said he’s reduced his
bottled water consumption.

But as study co-author, chemist Beizhan Yan, shared, “there’s just no win”
as water filtration systems can introduce microplastics into the water
supply.

Last August, microplastics were discovered in human heart tissue. And it
was discovered that humans are breathing in the equivalent of a credit
card-sized amount of microplastics per week, according to a June 2023
study that was reported in U.S. News and World Report.

Related: Forever Chemicals Found in Popular Supermarket Foods — Including
Brands Like Annie's Organic and Del Monte

“We know these microplastics are all over the place," Albert Rizzo, the
American Lung Association’s chief medical office, told National
Geographic. "We don’t know whether the presence in the body leads to a
problem. Duration is very important. How long you are exposed matters.”

"In the meantime," he asked, "can we make plastics safer?”

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https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/scientists-theyll-cut-back-bottled-
223613109.html

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