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Dataset Overview | National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI)

Microplastic concentrations in deep-sea sediments from Rockall Trough (Scotland, UK) collected aboard RRS Discovery on 2017-05-18 (NCEI Accession 0278002)

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This study estimated the concentration of microplastics (i.e. plastics measuring less than 5mm, reported in unit of pieces per g d.w.) in deep-sea sediments from Rockall Trough (Scotland, UK) on 2017-05-18. Microplastic data were collected aboard RRS Discovery using a megacorer. This dataset contains the results from all 90 deep-sea sediment samples, in a spreadsheet format.
  • Cite as: Courtene-Jones, Winnie; Quinn, Brian; Ewins, Ciaran; Gary, Stefan; Narayanaswamy, Bhavani (2023). Microplastic concentrations in deep-sea sediments from Rockall Trough (Scotland, UK) collected aboard RRS Discovery on 2017-05-18 (NCEI Accession 0278002). [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Dataset. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/archive/accession/0278002. Accessed [date].
gov.noaa.nodc:0278002
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Distributor NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
+1-301-713-3277
NCEI.Info@noaa.gov
Dataset Point of Contact NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
ncei.info@noaa.gov
Time Period 2017-05-18 to 2017-05-18
Spatial Bounding Box Coordinates
West: -11
East: -10
South: 57
North: 58
Spatial Coverage Map
General Documentation
Associated Resources
  • The NOAA NCEI Global Marine Microplastics Database (1972-present)
    • NCEI Collection
      Navigate directly to the URL for data access and direct download.
  • Courtene-Jones W, Quinn B, Ewins C, Gary SF, Narayanaswamy BE. Microplastic accumulation in deep-sea sediments from the Rockall Trough. Marine Pollution Bulletin. 2020 May 01; 154,111092.
  • Parent ID (indicates this dataset is related to other data):
    • gov.noaa.nodc:NCEI-Marine-Microplastics
Publication Dates
  • publication: 2023-05-12
Data Presentation Form Digital table - digital representation of facts or figures systematically displayed, especially in columns
Dataset Progress Status Complete - production of the data has been completed
Historical archive - data has been stored in an offline storage facility
Data Update Frequency As needed
Supplemental Information
Submission Package ID: WU1NRY
Purpose These microplastic concentration data were collected in order to determine the abundance of microplastics in deep-sea sediments from Rockall Trough (Scotland, UK) collected aboard RRS Discovery on 2017-05-18
Use Limitations
  • accessLevel: Public
  • Distribution liability: NOAA and NCEI make no warranty, expressed or implied, regarding these data, nor does the fact of distribution constitute such a warranty. NOAA and NCEI cannot assume liability for any damages caused by any errors or omissions in these data. If appropriate, NCEI can only certify that the data it distributes are an authentic copy of the records that were accepted for inclusion in the NCEI archives.
Dataset Citation
  • Cite as: Courtene-Jones, Winnie; Quinn, Brian; Ewins, Ciaran; Gary, Stefan; Narayanaswamy, Bhavani (2023). Microplastic concentrations in deep-sea sediments from Rockall Trough (Scotland, UK) collected aboard RRS Discovery on 2017-05-18 (NCEI Accession 0278002). [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Dataset. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/archive/accession/0278002. Accessed [date].
Cited Authors
Contributors
Resource Providers
Points of Contact
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Acknowledgments
  • Related Funding Agency: University of the Highlands and Island
  • Related Funding Agency: Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) National Capability funding (#R8-H12-85)
  • Related Funding Agency: Scottish Association for Marine Science
Theme keywords NODC DATA TYPES THESAURUS NODC OBSERVATION TYPES THESAURUS WMO_CategoryCode
  • oceanography
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
Data Center keywords NODC COLLECTING INSTITUTION NAMES THESAURUS NODC SUBMITTING INSTITUTION NAMES THESAURUS Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Data Center Keywords
Platform keywords NODC PLATFORM NAMES THESAURUS Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Platform Keywords ICES/SeaDataNet Ship Codes Provider Platform Names
  • RRS Discovery
Instrument keywords NODC INSTRUMENT TYPES THESAURUS Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Instrument Keywords Provider Instruments
  • Megacorer
Place keywords NODC SEA AREA NAMES THESAURUS Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Location Keywords Provider Place Names
  • Atlantic Ocean
Keywords NCEI ACCESSION NUMBER
Use Constraints
  • Cite as: Courtene-Jones, Winnie; Quinn, Brian; Ewins, Ciaran; Gary, Stefan; Narayanaswamy, Bhavani (2023). Microplastic concentrations in deep-sea sediments from Rockall Trough (Scotland, UK) collected aboard RRS Discovery on 2017-05-18 (NCEI Accession 0278002). [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Dataset. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/archive/accession/0278002. Accessed [date].
Access Constraints
  • Use liability: NOAA and NCEI cannot provide any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of furnished data. Users assume responsibility to determine the usability of these data. The user is responsible for the results of any application of this data for other than its intended purpose.
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  • In most cases, electronic downloads of the data are free. However, fees may apply for custom orders, data certifications, copies of analog materials, and data distribution on physical media.
Lineage information for: dataset
Processing Steps
  • 2023-05-12T15:35:29Z - NCEI Accession 0278002 v1.1 was published.
Output Datasets
Lineage information for: dataset
Processing Steps
  • Parameter or Variable: microplastic concentration (measured); Units: pieces per g d.w.; Observation Category: in situ; Sampling Instrument: Megacorer; Sampling and Analyzing Method: In this study, microplastics were examined in deep-sea sediments collected from the Rockall Trough, which is situated to the west of Scotland, United Kingdom. The monitoring site ‘Gage Station M' is located in the Rockall Trough (57.300°N, −10.383° W) at a depth of 2200 m. During the 2017 research cruise DY78–79 on-board R.R.S. Discovery, three Megacorer deployments were carried out within the locality of Gage Station M. Megacorers are designed to sample without creating a bow-wave and thus ensure sediments are not disturbed. An OSIL megacorer was utilized to obtain sediment cores from three sites around Gage Station M. The megacorer was rigged with six 60 cm long x 10 cm wide internal diameter core tubes to allow for a 50% redundancy. The megacorer was deployed at a rate of 0.8 ms-1 until 50 m from the seabed, upon where the winch rate was slowed to 0.3 ms-1. The megacorer remained on the seabed for 5 minutes before recovery to allow the core tubes to sink into the sediment. Hauling rate was limited to 0.2 ms-1 for the first 50 m from the seabed then increased to a rate of 0.6 ms-1 to the surface. Once on deck the core tubes were carefully removed from the megacorer frame and sealed with pre-cleaned rubber bungs at each end, before being transferred to wooden stands. The supernatant water from each of the sediment cores was carefully siphoned off so as not to disturb any of the underlying sediment. Each core (A – C) was sliced using a stainless-steel cutter at discrete depth intervals; 0.5 cm sections were taken for the uppermost 5 cm of sediment, 1 cm intervals between the depths of 5–10 cm, and 5 cm sections were taken thereafter until the end of the core. The extrusion of cores can lead to smearing effects at the outer edges, thus a few millimeters from the edges of each core section were removed with a stainless-steel spatula to avoid mixing artefacts caused by this process. Sediment horizons were transferred to labelled clean polyethylene zip lock bags, sealed immediately and frozen at −20 °C for later analysis of microplastic concentrations. The entire mass of sediment obtained from each depth horizon from the cores A and C from each of the three megacorer deployments (MG1697, MG1678, MG1699) were assessed for microplastics. Cores were processed in a random order to prevent bias in this extraction phase. Sediments were freeze dried and the weight of each horizon was recorded prior to processing. Microplastics were extracted from the sediment using the oil extraction protocol, with slight modifications to account for the larger sediment masses and smaller grain sizes analyzed here than in the original method. Dry sediment ranged in weight from 9 g to 79.6 g; samples with a large mass (> 40 g) were divided and two separate extractions were carried out. These samples (maximum 40 g dry weight (d.w.)) were put into separate pre-cleaned 250 ml conical flasks and double the volume of deionized water was added. For subsamples>25 g d.w., 7 ml of canola oil was added to this, while 5 ml of canola oil was added to sediment (sub)samples weighing<25 g d.w. which was indicated from preliminary experiments using spiked sediment samples. An aluminum foil lid was placed onto the conical flask and the contents were swirled for 30 s. This was then transferred to a 100 ml borosilicate glass separating funnel. The conical flask was rinsed twice with 25 ml of deionized water to ensure no particles remained on the internal walls and this was decanted into the separating funnel. The separating funnel was mixed vigorously for 30 s and then left to settle for 30 min. Following the settling period, the sediment and aqueous layers were emptied from the separating funnel into a waste beaker. A further 30 ml of deionized water was added to the separating funnel and it again was shaken vigorously for 30 s. This was then left for a second settling period of 30 min before the aqueous layer containing remaining sediment grains were emptied from the funnel into the waste beaker. The oil layer was retained and vacuum filtered through a 52 μm mesh size disc of transparent nylon gauze. The separating funnel was rinsed twice with 20 ml of 4% non-foaming detergent (Alcojet, Sigma-Aldrich) to remove any oil and remaining particles, this was then emptied through the gauze filter. The gauze was transferred to a lidded glass petri dish and was examined thoroughly three times under a dissecting microscope (Wild M5). Potential microplastics were transferred to a 30 mm petri dish containing a disc of filter paper (Whatman No. 1). To remove the oil residue from the surface of the microplastics a mixture of 99% ethanol and 99% isopropanol in a 1:1 ratio was used. Microplastics specific to each sample, were transferred to a glass cavity block in which a 5 ml volume of the ethanol: propanol mixture had been added. This was covered and incubated for 15 min, before the microplastics were recovered from the solvent mixture and returned to their specific 30 mm petri dish and sealed for further analysis. Putative microplastics were analyzed with a Perkin-Elmer One Fourier Transformation infrared (FTIR) microscope in transmission mode. Infrared radiation in the wavenumbers 600–4000 cm−1 were used and each spectra produced was the average from 16 co-added scans and was corrected against a background scan carried out prior to each sample. A variable aperture size was used and the spectral resolution was 4 cm−1. Data were visualized in OMNIC 9 (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.) with use of the inbuilt Hummel polymer library and the Alfred Wegener Institute ‘AWI’ (Primpke et al., 2018) library to facilitate polymeric identification; additionally, the characteristic functional group signals from each spectra were manually examined.; Data Quality Method: QA/QC was implemented wherever possible while on board the research cruise. Core tubes and rubber bungs were rinsed with deionized water prior to their use. The core collar, stainless steel cutter and spatula used to section the sediment cores were also washed thoroughly between use to prevent sample contamination or cross-contamination. Personnel wore nitrile gloves and where possible wore cotton coveralls, however due to weather limitations sometimes waterproof outwear was required. Samples of putative contaminants, such as the ropes used on the megacorer, tubes and bungs as well as clothing were taken to be analyzed alongside the microplastics samples. Within the laboratory, thorough cleaning of work benches and laboratory equipment was undertaken prior to any work. Glass and metal laboratory equipment were preferentially used over plastic and consumables were used directly from sterile packaging. Equipment was kept covered with clean aluminum foil when not in use and the samples were covered as much as possible to minimize exposure risk. Tapelift screening and atmospheric controls to monitor background contamination were implemented..
Acquisition Information (collection)
Instrument
  • Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer
  • sediment sampler - corer
Platform
  • RRS Discovery
Last Modified: 2023-07-09T13:36:26Z
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