Laurel Zaima

and 5 more

Microplastics have become ubiquitous in all reaches of the world. Due to their small size, low density, and environmental persistence, they are transported throughout the Earth's system. Despite its importance, little is known about microplastic transport and deposition, especially by snow particles, and most people are not aware of the extent of the problem. The PlastiX-Snow Citizen Science Project aims to fill these research and informational gaps using crowd-sourcing to achieve scientific research outputs, educational programming, and active outreach and engagement. We will initially measure the spatial distribution of snow deposited microplastics throughout a region in New York State and expand nationally using community partners. As trained partners, the Snow Ambassadors will inform the local community about microplastics, recruit participants, and assist in leading trainings. As nodes of the project, they will expand the reach to a large demographic of people across the country, including both life-long learners and school groups. Citizen scientists will collect, examine, and report the snow-deposited microplastics in their own backyard. The PlastiX-Snow team also will collect snowmelt samples from participants to robustly analyze the microplastics at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. According to a National Academy of Sciences, a primary concern regarding citizen science projects is the lack of engagement and feedback to the participants of the program's findings. We specifically address these challenges by actively and continually engaging our participants and partners through direct and virtual public programming, classroom visits, media, newsletters, and an interactive website. PlastiX-Snow goals are to 1. Collect data for a deeper understanding of microplastics disseminated by snow, 2. Teach the public about the dangers of microplastics and potential solutions, 3. Engage communities, students, educators, and the public to participate in groundbreaking, relevant scientific research. We aim to shed light on the severity of microplastic pollution, build a bridge between the public and the scientific community, connect citizen scientists to their natural environment through field work, and encourage them to serve as environmental stewards and leaders in their own communities.

Shujie Wang

and 6 more

Rapid retreat of the Larsen A and B ice shelves has provided important clues about the ice shelf destabilization processes. The Larsen C Ice Shelf, the largest remaining ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula, may also be vulnerable to future collapse in a warming climate. Here, we utilize multi-source satellite images collected over 1963–2020 to derive multidecadal time series of ice front, flow velocities, and critical rift features over Larsen C, with the aim of understanding the controls on its retreat. We complement these observations with modeling experiments using the Ice-sheet and Sea-level System Model to examine how front geometry conditions and mechanical weakening due to rifts affect ice shelf dynamics. Over the past six decades, Larsen C lost over 20% of its area, dominated by rift-induced tabular iceberg calving. The Bawden Ice Rise and Gipps Ice Rise are critical areas for rift formation, through their impact on the longitudinal deviatoric stress field. Mechanical weakening around Gipps Ice Rise is found to be a primary control on localized flow acceleration, leading to the propagation of two rifts that caused a major calving event in 2017. Capturing the time-varying effects of rifts on ice rigidity in ice shelf models is essential for making realistic predictions of ice shelf flow dynamics and instability. In the context of the Larsen A and Larsen B collapses, we infer a chronology of destabilization processes for embayment-confined ice shelves, which provides a useful framework for understanding the historical and future destabilization of Antarctic ice shelves.