Media releases

  • Brock students find alarming amounts of plastic in sand at St. Catharines beach

    MEDIA RELEASE: 22 January 2020 – R0014

    A day at the beach doesn’t often involve lab work, but for a group of Brock University fourth-year Geography students tasked with assessing plastic waste on the shores of Lake Ontario last fall, it was just that.

    Back in October, students from Professor of Geography and Tourism Studies Michael Pisaric’s GEOG 4P26 class visited Sunset Beach in north St. Catharines to measure the quantity of plastics turning up in the sand.

    Students measured out plots on the beach and sifted through the sand to collect as many tiny pieces of plastic as they could. They compiled their findings in lab reports for the end of the Fall Term.

    The results are now in, and they’re alarming.

    In one sample alone, one square metre of the beach yielded 665 individual pieces of plastic material.

    Pisaric called the amount and variety of plastics collected in the samples “striking.”

    “I think much of the discussion concerning plastics in the environment has been focused on the oceans and we are quickly understanding that plastic pollution is also an important issue closer to home in the Great Lakes,” said Pisaric, who is also Chair of the Geography and Tourism Studies Department. “This small study of a single beach on Lake Ontario clearly shows the prevalence of plastic pollution in our own backyard is a serious problem.”

    Emily Bowyer, a third-year student from Mississauga majoring in Geography and Biology who participated in the field collection, described it as “an opportunity to see the magnitude of the problems in the environment first-hand.”

    Another surprise to the team was the prevalence of nurdles — small plastic pellets used in the manufacture of many different goods.

    Investigation during the course uncovered a 2013 Toronto Star article that suggested nurdles may have made their way into Lake Ontario via the Humber River during a factory fire.

    “It is interesting to speculate that the prevalence of nurdles we noted in our samples may have originated on the other side of Lake Ontario,” Pisaric said.

    The professor plans to run a similar investigation when the course is offered again next fall to address some of the questions that cropped up in light of the results of the students’ labs.

    “Perhaps next time around I will have the students compare the beaches on Lake Ontario with a beach on Lake Erie,” he said. “Are similar quantities of plastics occurring in both areas? Do the types of plastic differ between the two lake environments?”

    Carolyn Finlayson, Experiential Education Co-ordinator for the Faculty of Social Sciences, attended the field trip and witnessed how interested casual beach visitors were in the students’ activities.

    “It’s a wonderful example of the larger impact experiential learning can have on our Niagara community and our students,” she said. “By working at the beach that day for their lab, students were able to start conversations with beachgoers about their use of plastic and its impact on the shorelines they enjoy.”

    Cara Krezek, Director of Co-op, Career and Experiential Education, said these were exactly the types of courses the University envisioned when it committed to expanding experiential learning so all students had access to meaningful experiences in their programs.

    “Courses like these take our students into a real-world setting and allow them to apply their knowledge, learn new skills and reflect on how they can take these experiences forward to a future career path,” Krezek said. “I am certain these students will never forget their findings and it will change the way they interact with plastics.”

    Professor of Geography and Tourism Studies Michael Pisaric is available for interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Director of Research for MMIWG inquiry to speak at Brock

    MEDIA RELEASE: 21 January 2020 – R0013

    Karine Duhamel will be at Brock University Thursday, Jan. 23 to talk about her work as Director of Research for the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG), and the work she has done since with families and survivors.

    Duhamel’s research focuses on Indigenous rights movements in Canada and the U.S., the history and legacy of residential schools, and the spirit and intent of treaty relationships.

    The National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls was mandated to report on the causes of all forms of violence against Indigenous women and girls, including underlying social, economic, and historical causes as well as existing institutional policies and practices addressing violence.

    “The MMIWG inquiry is vital for families and communities affected to attempt to find answers and perhaps some solace,” said Brock History Professor Maureen Lux. “But it is also fundamental in Canada’s rather-recent examination of the legacies of colonialism. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission began the conversation, the MMIWG inquiry broadens and deepens the discussion.”

    In her role as Director of Research for the MMIWG National Inquiry, Duhamel drafted the Final Report and managed the Forensic Document Review Project and the Legacy Archive.

    Traditionally, Indigenous women and girls were revered as life-givers and caregivers, and the National Inquiry envisioned building a foundation that allows Indigenous women and girls to reclaim their power and place.

    Interviewed earlier this week on CKTB’s One Dish One Mic, Duhamel said “We really wanted to focus on this idea of our women and girls as sacred as a way of denormalizing violence and instead finding identity and safety and culture.”

    “We wanted to identify cultural programming, not as a nice-to-have, but an essential thing,” said Duhamel, who described culture and safety as being intrinsically linked.

    The Inquiry consulted with elders, knowledge keepers, oral histories, and storytelling to identify Indigenous ideas about the roles and responsibilities of women and girls and their places in communities and families.

    Duhamel’s lecture, ‘I am here for justice and I am here for change — Inside the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls,’ will be held Thursday, Jan. 23 at 6 p.m. in Pond Inlet. It is free and open to the public.

    Organized by the Department of History, the talk is also sponsored by the Centre for Canadian Studies, the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies, the Department of Political Science, the Department of Sociology, the Faculty of Humanities, and the Social Justice and Equity Studies program.

     

    What: Free public lecture by Karine Duhamel, Director of Research, National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls

    When: Thursday, Jan. 23 at 6 p.m.

    Where: Pond Inlet, Brock University

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases