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Posted: 2017-05-08T09:01:20Z | Updated: 2017-05-08T12:07:54Z See The Staggering Number Of Plastic Bags Your Family Uses Each Year | HuffPost

See The Staggering Number Of Plastic Bags Your Family Uses Each Year

This will make you think twice at the grocery store checkout line.
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LUHUANFENG via Getty Images

This story is part of a series on ocean plastics .

Plastic grocery bags were first introduced in America in the late 1970s. Today, they’re ubiquitous and almost always free for customers. The problem is, we don’t know what to do with them when we get them home. 

They’re supposed to get recycled, but most aren’t . You probably have a bunch lining your garbage cans, or balled up in a heap under the sink. You’ll see them stuck in trees and wafting lazily in the wind. You might even use them to pick up your dog’s poo. 

Many of them end up in landfills , where they can sit for hundreds of years, potentially leaking pollutants into the soil and water. They also clog storm drains and jam recycling equipment . Countless tons of them are floating around in the oceans , and pieces of them can be found in the stomachs of dying or dead sea turtles and whales .

So, just how many plastic bags does the average family use each year? Enter your best guess below.

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Before You Go

Ocean Plastics And The Animals They Hurt
(01 of16)
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Turtle with plastic around its shell. (credit:Missouri Department of Conservation)
(02 of16)
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A dead albatross chick with plastic marine debris in its stomach. Photographed on Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge in the Pacific Ocean in September 2009. (credit:Chris Jordan/US Fish and Wildlife Service)
(03 of16)
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Blue striped grunt fish caught in red plastic band in Caribbean Sea. (credit:Karen Doody/Stocktrek Images via Getty Images)
(04 of16)
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Bird appearing to be strangled by a balloon string. (credit:Pamela Denmon USFWS)
(05 of16)
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Shark with debris in its mouth. (credit:Aaron ODea/Marine Photobank)
(06 of16)
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Cape fur seal that died of suffocation from plastic around its neck. (credit:Martin Harvey via Getty Images)
(07 of16)
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Bird caught in plastic debris. (credit:David Cayless/Marine Photobank)
(08 of16)
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Green sea turtle entangled in debris -- for air-breathing organisms, debris entanglement can prevent animals from being able to swim to the surface, causing them to drown. (credit:NOAA)
(09 of16)
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Lemon shark with plastic bag caught around its gills in the Bahamas. (credit:Jonathan Bird via Getty Images)
(10 of16)
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Northern elephant seal with plastic scar on Guadalupe Island in Mexico. (credit:Kevin Schafer via Getty Images)
(11 of16)
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Scientist reveals the plastic bags pulled from the intestines of a beached goose-beaked whale in Norway (credit:Christoph Noever/University of Bergen)
(12 of16)
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Bao XiShun, the world's tallest man, retrieves plastic from the stomach of a sick dolphin as workers hold back its jaws at an aquarium in Fushun, China, in 2006. Xishun came to the rescue of two sick dolphins after they had swallowed plastic from their pool and vets were unable to reach it to remove it. (credit:VCG via Getty Images)
(13 of16)
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Sea turtle that ingested a balloon. (credit:Blair Witherington/NOAA)
(14 of16)
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NOAA divers release seal from marine debris entanglement, which can lead to injury or death in marine animals. (credit:NOAA)
(15 of16)
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Stork covered in a plastic bag in Spain. (credit:Getty Images)
(16 of16)
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A deceased Laysan Albatross lies on the ground in Midway Atoll, with an exposed stomach filled with debris it consumed around its coastal habitat. Marine animals cannot digest debris and often die due to starvation. (credit:NOAA)