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Newfoundland beach blobs are plastic pollution, but source remains unknown: scientist

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A scientist has determined that the strange white blobs puzzling Newfoundland beachcombers are made of a plastic commonly found in adhesives, but the origin of the mysterious goo is still unknown.
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Images of strange white glob appearing on the province's beaches in Newfoundland are shown in this handout photo provided by the Environment and Climate Change Canada. A Memorial University scientist says the mysterious white blobs washing up on Newfoundland beaches are actually gobs of plastic — and they need to be cleaned up. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Environment and Climate Change Canada *MANDATORY CREDIT*

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A scientist has determined that the strange white blobs puzzling Newfoundland beachcombers are made of a plastic commonly found in adhesives, but the origin of the mysterious goo is still unknown.

Hilary Corlett, an Earth sciences specialist at Memorial University, collected several of the sticky globs from a beach in Arnold's Cove, N.L., last month and gave them to a colleague for testing. The results, she said, came in late last week: it was polyvinyl acetate, often found in glue.

"It is pollution," Corlett said in an interview Tuesday. "It's plastic. It needs to be cleaned up."

Members of a Newfoundland and Labrador beachcombers group on Facebook began sharing pictures of the bizarre gunk in September, asking if anyone knew what it was. Group members had many suggestions, some more helpful than others: slime moulds, whale boogers, or toutons — fried dollops of bread dough popular in Newfoundland breakfasts.

Corlett was intrigued. She studies marine microplastics and figured she had to go find a sample for herself. She said she was amazed to find about 20 of the mysterious mounds within her first few steps onto the small beach about 100 kilometres northwest of St. John's.

"There's a lot of them," she said.

They smell like plastic, like "that smell when you walk into a Canadian Tire," Corlett said. Some had imprints of rocks and pebbles, as if they'd once been liquid.

They were slimy and "quite squishy," but still firm, she said. When ripped apart, the material had no pores.

She gave the samples to Memorial University chemistry professor Christopher Kozak, who subjected them to a barrage of tests. The goo remained intact even at temperatures beyond 180 C. Using a procedure to identify the individual elements of the substance, he determined it was polyvinyl acetate, Corlett said.

Kozak said the next step is to test his results. He'll soon be heading to a hardware store to buy a large quantity of industrial-strength polyvinyl acetate adhesive so he can see how it reacts with cold ocean water, he said in an interview.

"It's much easier to disprove a theory than to prove a theory," Kozak said. "But I do think that this came from some industrial source."

The waters off Newfoundland's east coast are home to four oilfields, and Kozak said he is looking at whether the substance could also be some kind of coagulant used in the oil industry.

Environment Canada said last month that preliminary tests suggested the "mystery substance" may be "plant-based." The department did not immediately return a request for comment, but said Friday its scientists were analyzing the substance and that officials could not speculate about what it might be or where it came from.

Corlett said the testing shows the blobs are safe to touch, and she hopes there will be beach cleanup efforts to remove it.

She also hopes officials will work to determine where the substance came from, and whether there are more blobs — possibly much larger — sitting on the ocean floor.

"Understanding where it is in the ocean, I think would be something that would be a good idea," she said. "Because I think it should be cleaned up."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.

Sarah Smellie, The Canadian Press

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