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In the meantime, residents who want to be sure their glass bottles are being recycled should take them to one of the designated drop-off locations in Arlington, and not put glass into their ...
One of the best things about living in a wine town like Aspen is that many of the world’s top producers find their way here.
Researchers studying microplastic contamination in common beverages made a startling discovery: Drinks stored in glass bottles contained between five and 50 times the level of microplastics as ...
What if your empty wine bottle could restore a coastline? Louisiana has two problems: an eroding coastline and limited glass recycling. Engineer Franziska Trautmann is solving both by turning ...
Drinks sold in glass bottles, like soda, wine, or beer, may contain more microplastic particles than those in plastic ones, a surprising new study published by France's food safety agency suggests.
A new French study reveals drinks in glass bottles contain more microplastics than those in plastic, tracing sources to painted metal caps.
On average, glass bottles of soft drinks, lemonade, iced tea, and beer contained around 100 microplastic particles per litre—up to 50 times more than plastic bottles or metal cans.
Drinks contained in glass bottles contain more microplastic particles than those in plastic bottles, cartons or cans, a new study has found. The source of these microplastics in glass bottles is ...
Much to their surprise, they found that glass-bottled beverages — including lemonade, iced tea, beer and soda — had five to 50 times more microplastics than their plastic or metal counterparts.
Glass bottles contain significantly more microplastics than plastic bottles, a study released by France's food safety agency, ANSES, has claimed, contradicting the longstanding assumptions.
French government scientists have discovered something shocking about the microplastic content in glass and plastic bottles.