Joint 69th Annual Southeastern / 55th Annual Northeastern Section Meeting - 2020

Paper No. 38-30
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

MICROPLASTIC DEPOSITION ON ST. CATHERINES ISLAND, GEORGIA


WILLIAMS, Sheri J., Geology & Geography, Georgia Southern University, 68 Georgia Ave., Statesboro, GA 30460 and VANCE, R. Kelly, Department of Geology and Geography, Georgia Southern University, Box 8149 Department of Geology and Geography, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA 30460

The discarded remains of plastics circumnavigating the globe via ocean currents and tides have been reported worldwide. Microplastics, pieces between 5.0 mm and 0.063 mm, are defined as fibers, pellets, and macroscopic pieces that are degraded into progressively smaller pieces. A growing global concern is the potential ecological and environmental impact of microplastics in the water column and in marine sediments. This study focuses on St. Catherines Island, Georgia, a barrier island located ~ 50 miles south of Savannah, Georgia. The Pleistocene island core is flanked by Holocene ridge and swale deposits and salt marsh. The island shoreline is eroding ~ 3 mm per year average except the northern end, where the island is prograding due to the presence of a large ebb tidal delta. Most microplastic studies have focused on sampling the surficial beach sediments and the water column. This study explores microplastic deposition in beach and marsh sediments of a barrier island. Samples from the salt marshes, washover fans, and middle shoreface were collected from the surface to a depth of ~25 cm in 5 cm increments. Additional samples were obtained from swales in the northern dunes. Density separation and visual inspection was used to capture and identify microplastics in the samples. Preliminary results have found microplastic in all samples. A total of 120 pieces of microplastics were found in four surficial samples, ~ 300 g of sediment each, taken from the washover fans. Microfibers have been the majority of microplastics recovered thus far and pellets the fewest. One sample contained ~ 50% microfibers compared to pellets and particles. The southern washover fans have had the highest percentage of recovered plastics at both the beach ridge and midpoint of the fan. The northern washover fans had the fewest particles at the midpoint but the beach ridge sample was comparable to the southern washover fans.