Plastic Trash Forming Into "Plastiglomerate" Rocks 123
sciencehabit (1205606) writes 'Plastic may be with us a lot longer than we thought. In addition to clogging up landfills and becoming trapped in Arctic ice, some of it is turning into stone. Scientists say a new type of rock cobbled together from plastic, volcanic rock, beach sand, seashells, and corals has begun forming on the shores of Hawaii. The new material--which the researchers are calling a "plastiglomerate"--may be becoming so pervasive that it actually becomes part of the geologic record.'
UV (Score:5, Insightful)
Riddle me this batman... UV light breaks down plastic, I've witnessed it every time I restore a car, or an old computer. All the plastic becomes brittle, breaks down, and eventually crumbles to plastic dust... Why doesn't this happen to the plastic in the ocean -- and everywhere else?
Re: UV (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: UV (Score:5, Informative)
This may be an interesting parallell to what happened during the Carboniferous era, when apparently plant matter didn't rot away until the fungi evolved the ability to break down lignin. As a matter of fact, there are a few fungi that are able to attack some kinds of plastic too.
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Buy a shovel.
Re: UV (Score:2)
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These conglomerates are made of burned plastics. UV will likely break them down eventually (by "eventually" I mean "much less than geological time").
Plastic in the ocean does the same thing.
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I just wonder how long it will be until some microbe evolves that can chew on polymers, breaking them up into something digestible.
Re:UV (Score:5, Insightful)
>microbes eating plastic
You're not the only one to ask that question.
http://www.goodreads.com/book/... [goodreads.com]
I picked that book up in the 70s and the story sorta stuck with me. Worth the read.
--
BMO
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They were routinely adding antibacterial agents to nylon when I worked in a nylon spinning plant back in the 80's. I think the practice goes back to the 50's or 60's.
Was that to protect the nylon from bacteria or to prevent bacteria from hanging around on the nylon and infecting whoever wears it next?
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Bacteria have evolved to deconstruct plastic (http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110328/full/news.2011.191.html).
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So geologists can't use this a marker for the Anthropocene? They'll have to use subway tunnels instead?
Re:UV (Score:5, Informative)
Most of the plastic IS the dust - the big plastic garbage patch is made up of really tiny pellets after the big chunks have broken down.
And what's happening looks like the plastic is breaking down and the pieces are starting to glob together forming some strange multi-material piece of plastic.
Of course, once the dust gets small enough, the breakdown has to happen by UV only. In a big chunk, the plastic becomes brittle and the wave action helps break it down further, but once it's dust, it's too small for mechanical breakdown.
Re:UV (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm sure the plastic that's exposed is broken down but...
1. This article is mostly about plastic that's melted in beach campfires along with a bunch of other crap. If the UV rays are only hitting the surface of the plastic it's not going to break down the crap inside.
2. Stuff floating in the ocean only has a little bit exposed to the UV Rays. Most of it is going to be underwater. Even if it rolls around in the waves what spends times exposed is going to be much less than something sitting stationary gett
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Only one picture - nfm (Score:2)
Only one picture - nfm
Re:Only one picture - nfm (Score:4, Informative)
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Nebraska Furniture Mart??
standardized fossil record (Score:1)
available in 2 liter, 1 liter, 20/16/12 oz. for your convenience.
Don't Miss the Rush... (Score:5, Funny)
Now is the time to start buying mining rights for all that valuable plastic ore.
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Now is the time to start buying mining rights for all that valuable plastic ore.
"That plastic 'ore"?! I don't think that Katie Price [mirror.co.uk] is for sale at the moment...
Our age will be known as... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Our age will be known as... (Score:4, Insightful)
I think The Obscene will capture the spirit better.
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http://hitchhikers.wikia.com/w... [wikia.com]
George Carlin was Right! (Score:5, Insightful)
The Earth wanted plastic. [youtube.com]
Re:George Carlin was Right! (Score:5, Interesting)
Parent link George Carlin (Q:"Why are we here?" A:"Plastic, asshole.") routine was insightful. Reporting on environmental problems needs to better distinguish between serious harms like habitat loss and species extinction, resource conservation issues (one generation using everything up - like fresh water - disadvantaging later human generations), and what researchers call "fetishizing". The "fetish" is used when people are made to feel guilty about something (e.g. "waste") and continue to attach guilt and responsibility to the item based not on risk but on past human ownership. This can lead to regulations which disadvantage recycling (secondary copper smelters), secondary markets (e.g. used display devices and cell phones) disproportionately to the risk.
There are some interesting academic papers on environmental fetishes and untended consequences of fixations based on previous human 'ownership' and 'guilt association'. Many environmentalists are scientists and are aware of the 'quasi-religion' of moral risk association, but are afraid to speak openly about it the same as the Renaissance's great thinkers were afraid to publicly pose their doubts about Christianity. The philosophers doubted much about sources of Christian ethics but were concerned about replacing it with anarchy. Scientific environmentalists have similar concerns about exposing "fetish" environmentalism without discrediting actual moral progress on stewardship.
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Hey.... (Score:2)
> some of it is turning into stone.
Recycling!
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George Carlin called it (Score:2)
Re:George Carlin called it (Score:4, Insightful)
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Get out of here. We are nature too. Just because we are self aware does not make us different. We evolved just like every other species. Beavers change their habitat too. Just we do it so much better. Self hating humans are the worst type. If you truly believe this then hopefully you made the choice to NOT have children.(as opposed to the forever alone basement dwellers where everyone else has made that choice for them)
Nature is pretty good at regulating species that get out of hand. However, I for one am not going to be happy when natural negative feedback, in the form of mass starvation and disease kick in. I would prefer if we used our main gift, our minds, to prevent the worst of that by anticipating and solving the problems well before they become extinction level.
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There's no reason for anything. Life is just a bunch of stuff that happens, and one day it might stop happening if something big enough hits the planet, like the one that made the moon.
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Our meaning is fulfilled (Score:2)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v... [youtube.com]
I don't think they are rocks (Score:3, Insightful)
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Do you consider coal to be a rock?
And neither does anyone else... (Score:5, Informative)
Please, RTFA!
The scientists in this article are classifying the characteristics of a new heterogeneous material, which is a necessity as the time for breakdown of this material may make it a significant part of the fossil record.
The scientists are not saying it is a new form of rock. Only possibly the submitter or samzenpus are (mistakenly) saying this.
To repeat: RTFA, no new rocks here!
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Please, RTFA!
You must be new here.
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I did rtf. It says new type of rock all over it.
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FTA:
Here, we report the appearance of a new “stone” formed through intermingling of melted plastic, beach sediment, basaltic lava fragments, and organic debris from Kamilo Beach on the island of Hawaii.
See figure 4 for, imho, the most descriptive pictures
Iron Age...Plastic Age. (Score:2)
I can see the history books... the Plastic Age, beginning in the the mid 20th century....
We really are in the plastic age. When everybody has a form of computer... guess that is the computer age--- although it's impact is not as deep as plastic yet... so does it count as an Age yet?? Iron Age changed everything... so I suppose computers were there around 2000? (remember world... but then the Iron Age began before it was world wide...)
Internet Age... are we at that yet? Seems these huge changes are happenin
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Socially, we are in the information age.
Economically, we are moving into the service age,
Geologically possible the plastic age.
Rock is a aggregate of materials. This could lead to a new classifications of rock; which will be interesting for out petrology friends.
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How are these things rocks? ... once you stick to a rock you become a rock? ... plastic is now considered a mineral? If I melt glass around a rock, can I call that a new type of rock? Or can I take super glue and glue some pebbles together and call that a new type of rock?
Even if you DNRTFA.... ... depends... in this form, yes... 2* yes, sort of...
Apparently
How did you think Sandstone and Shale are created... or Obsidian? What do you think Amber is? Just because it is ground up other stuff with nice fossils in it (Sandstone/shale), a kind of glass (Obsidian) or has a non-geological origin (tree resin in case of Amber) doesn't mean it can't become rock.
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Super-glue plus pebbles it a type of rock... It's called conglomerate. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C... [wikipedia.org]
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Rock Lobster? ROCK LOBSTER!
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There's already glass conglomerate minerals.
That would be a plastiglomerate, because cured cyanoacrylates are plastics.
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Considering that plastic is created by refining a mineral, in this case oil*, maybe it could be considered a mineral itself.
*Petrolium oil, extracted from the earth as crude oil, as against vegatable oil, etc.
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Charlton Heston says it's ok for humans to condescend on humanity.
Awesome! (Score:1)
Yeah this is controversial and will piss off all the hippies, but I think it's awesome how humans are affecting the ecosystem of earth. And years later, when we are gone and monkeys evolve again, these new intelligent animals will piece together the fact that there was once intelligent life here based on structures such as this.
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And years later, when we are gone and monkeys evolve again, these new intelligent animals will piece together the fact that there was once intelligent life here based on structures such as this.
No, years later when dinosaurs evolve again they'll assume that the substance is derived from dead mammals. Then the ultra-intelligent and efficient reptiles will dominate for another few million years, living lightly off the land such that vast swamps of plants that were never cut down produced oil so that the n
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Put some thrusters on earth, and fire prograde.
(whattaya mean, "too much KSP"?!?)
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I'm worrying about getting my retirement account fully funded and you're worried about ... solar expansion?
Go away.
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Yeah this is controversial and will piss off all the hippies, but I think it's awesome how humans are affecting the ecosystem of earth.
There isn't anything strange or awesome about a species affecting the ecosystem of Earth - the oxygen content of our atmosphere is largely due to cyanobacteria and the like. Apparently there is little on this planet that isn't affected to a significant extent by life - even things like land erosion and plate techtonics.
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Charlton Heston says monkeys will inherit the Earth. Again.
A new kind of (Score:2)
Horta
Like organic things in dinosaur era (Score:4, Interesting)
Does this mean that like organic things in dinosaur era which turned into petroleum in favorable conditions, these plasticrocks will turn to rock oil ?
Typical AAAS tripe (Score:3, Insightful)
Here's the key phrase out of the abstract: "...melted plastic during campfire burning... [increases] the potential for burial and subsequent preservation". Why? Because lumps of melted plastic stick to sand or rocks, and hence are more likely to not blow away, be degraded by UV or whatever.
This is a topic for a scientific paper, and deem headline-worthy by the AAAS? I knew there was a reason I cancelled my membership a couple of decades ago...
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You sure you didn't cancel your membership to the AARP?
This was posted in the proceedings of the Geological Society of America, Not the American Academy for the Advance of Science (AAAS).
* For those of you fine Slashdotters not of the American persuasion, the AARP [aarp.org] used to be called the American Association of Retired Persons, likely to differentiate itself from the AAA, the American Automobile Association. Now it appears to be just called AARP.
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You sure you didn't cancel your membership to the AARP?
This was posted in the proceedings of the Geological Society of America, Not the American Academy for the Advance of Science (AAAS).
* For those of you fine Slashdotters not of the American persuasion, the AARP [aarp.org] used to be called the American Association of Retired Persons, likely to differentiate itself from the AAA, the American Automobile Association. Now it appears to be just called AARP.
Spend more time fact checking and less time trying to prove people wrong:
The first link in the article blurb above is to a headline on the AAAS website, which publishes the journal Science.
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Now Monty Python Makes Sense (Score:1)
"What also floats in water?
- Bread. - Apples.
- Very small rocks. - Cider! Great gravy.
- Cherries. Mud. - Churches."
I knew that small rock would float one day !
They were visionary !
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Plastic melting Trend!!! (Score:1)
global warming? (Score:2)
So instead of releasing the carbon into the atmosphere we're pissed off because now we have ugly rocks that are made of trapped carbon?
If this plastiglomerate can remain in the environment for eons, then I'm thinking we should make more of it, a lot more of it.
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To bad it uses more then it traps.
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it uses it therefor it traps. but I assume you meant the word "use" in some other way...
we are pulling hydrocarbons from deep underground and if we continue to either burn it or allow it to decompose, it will become CO2 and contribute to the greenhouse effect. Anything that could sequester carbon long term is better than the nothing we are doing today.
the eventual goal would be to stop pulling material out of the ground, and reverse the trend and put carbon back faster than we take it out. We're so far away
Perfect way to make our mark (Score:1)
Half Life did it first... (Score:2)
So HL2, came out in back in 2004 had this quote in it, from the character of Dr Breen : Are all the accomplishments of humanity fated to be nothing more than a layer of broken plastic shards thinly strewn across a fossil bed, sandwiched between the Burgess shale and an eon's worth of mud?
While certainly this is not a surprise consequence to anyone in a scientific field(s) involved. I find it somewhat ironic that the sentiment (no pun), showed up in a video game.
Only one? (Score:2)
Am I the only one that thought... Cool!
VHS Tapes and the Boomers (Score:1)
I always thought that they should build Boomer retirement communities out of all those VHS tapes that were sold to them during the 80s and 90s. Where are they now?
ha anot exposed (Score:1)
the world's a can for your fresh garbage (Score:1)