AI Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Geographical-Distribution-of-Sea-Salt-contained-Microplastics-by-Country-or-Region--ADOBE-ILLUSTRATOR--27MZIFJWSZGAZ.htmlDownloadConceptually similarINDDData for Riverine Plastic Emission and Sea Salt-contained Microplastics (ADOBE INDESIGN)GP0STSKUMCompleted★★★★★AIRank of Sea Salt Brands in the Order of Microplastics Contents (ADOBE ILLUSTRATOR)GP0STSKUNCompleted★★★★★PDFData for Riverine Plastic Emission and Sea Salt-contained Microplastics (PDF)GP0STSKUQCompleted★★★★★PDFLess Is More InfographicGP0STRM4DCompleted★★★★★★PDFPlastic Pollution in the Black Sea: Research Results (Infographic)GP1SUMT9Completed★★★★PDFPlastic Pollution in the Black Sea: Research Results (Infographic)GP1SUMT7Completed★★★★★PDFPlastic Pollution in the Black Sea: Research Results (Infographic)GP1SUMT2Completed★★★★PDFPlastic Pollution in the Black Sea: Research Results (Infographic)GP1SUMTCCompleted★★★★AIDid you know - InfographicGP0STR63PCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STSKUVGeographical Distribution of Sea Salt-contained Microplastics by Country or Region (ADOBE ILLUSTRATOR)Infographic shows the geographical distribution of sea salt-contained microplastics for each country or region. The data is from a study called “Global Pattern of Microplastics (MPs) in Commercial Food-Grade Salts" which found positive correlations between microplastics in seawater and microplastics...Date:17 Oct, 2018Credit:© GreenpeaceKeywords:Food-Graphics (Record Type)-KWCI (GPI)-Maps-Marine pollution-Microplastics-Oceans (campaign title)-Plastics-Research-Salts-ScienceShoot:Microplastics in Sea Salt InfographicsA study called “Global Pattern of Microplastics (MPs) in Commercial Food-Grade Salts: Sea Salt as an Indicator of Seawater MP Pollution" co-designed by Professor Kim, Seung-Kyu at Incheon University and Greenpeace East Asia found positive correlations between microplastics in seawater and microplastics in sea salts which people consume everyday. The study reveals a global pattern showing that sea salt containing the highest levels of microplastic is sourced on coasts polluted by microplastics. Greenpeace is urging corporations around the world to reduce and eventually phase out single-use plastics.Link to study: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.8b04180