Muse: The magazine of science, culture, and smart laughs for kids and children

HOW EVERYDAY STUFF TURNS INTO MICROPLASTICS

MICROPLASTICS are all over the news lately. Actually,these plastic bits 0.2 inches (5 mm) wide or smaller are all over everything—from our food to the insides of animals, and especially in the oceans.

Most plastic is non-biodegradable. When something biodegradable breaks down, it chemically changes into new substances. Bacteria and other microbes will digest a banana peel over a few weeks until it becomes soil. By contrast, plastic stays plastic forever. But it can still physically break into smaller pieces. This happens fastest outside, because the ultraviolet light in sunlight weakens and cracks plastic. Eventually, it breaks into smaller pieces. There’s no limit to how small those pieces can get, and that’s how we end up with microplastics. Bigger microplastics might look like individual grains of dust, just barely big enough to see with your eyes. Others are invisible without a microscope. These may be the size of human blood cells, or

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Muse: The magazine of science, culture, and smart laughs for kids and children

Muse: The magazine of science, culture, and smart laughs for kids and children5 min read
Guardians Of The Forest
In a steamy rainforest, an orangutan scales a tree, gripping and grabbing with fingers and toes. Palm fronds rustle. At the top, it uses its teeth and hairy hands to rip away the bark, revealing the ivory-colored center, the “heart of the palm.” High
Muse: The magazine of science, culture, and smart laughs for kids and children2 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
Should Tech Spy On Primates’ Heart Rates?
A CHIMPANZEE STICKS ITS FINGER THROUGH A HOLE IN ITS ENCLOSURE. Next, a researcher attaches a heart rate monitor to the finger. As the chimp sips on a juice reward for cooperating, a camera records its face. The images feed into an artificial intelli
Muse: The magazine of science, culture, and smart laughs for kids and children2 min read
Who Owns The Moon?
INDIA LANDED AN UNCREWED SPACECRAFT ON THE MOON FOR THE FIRST TIME IN AUGUST 2023. Japan just reached the Moon for the first time with a robotic spacecraft in January. And in 2026, the United States is set to land astronauts on the Moon for the first

Related Books & Audiobooks