enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tucson Garbage Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tucson_Garbage_Project

    For a long time, it was believed that paper is a relatively safe and environmentally friendly waste product, degrading quickly in landfills. Rathje showed, however, that paper is typically a bad degrader: newspapers dumped in landfills as much as over half a century ago, turn up again as fresh and as readable as the day they were issued. [2]

  3. Garbage landslide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbage_landslide

    A garbage landslide [1] is a man-made event that occurs when poorly managed garbage mounds at landfills collapse with similar energy to natural landslides.These kinds of slides can be catastrophic as they sometimes occur near communities of people, often being triggered by weather or human interaction. [1]

  4. Biodegradable waste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodegradable_waste

    Landfills are the third-largest source of methane in the US. [ 17 ] Because of the significant negative effects of these gases, regulatory regimes have been set up to monitor landfill gas , reduce the amount of biodegradable content in municipal waste , and to create landfill gas utilization strategies, which include gas flaring or capture for ...

  5. Landfill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landfill

    A landfill [a] is a site for the disposal of waste materials. It is the oldest and most common form of waste disposal, although the systematic burial of waste with daily, intermediate and final covers only began in the 1940s.

  6. Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1965 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_Waste_Disposal_Act...

    The second industrial revolution of the late 19th and early 20th centuries led to major increases in the national economic output, resulting in large increases in the generation of waste. Local and regional governments and private companies developed many diverse, and frequently unsafe or unsanitary, disposal technologies for disposal of this ...

  7. Solid waste policy of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_waste_policy_of_the...

    There are different designs for landfills used for municipal solid waste or household waste, construction & demolition waste, and hazardous waste. According to an EPA report, the number of municipal solid waste landfills has gone down from 7924 in 1988 to 1754 in 2006. There were close to 1900 construction & demolition landfills in 1994. [6] [21]

  8. Food loss and waste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_loss_and_waste

    a FUSIONS (an EU project) 2016 report: "Food waste is any food, and inedible parts of food, removed from the food supply chain to be recovered or disposed (including composed [sic], crops ploughed in/not harvested, anaerobic digestion, bioenergy production, co-generation, incineration, disposal to sewer, landfill or discarded to sea)"; and

  9. Landfill gas utilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landfill_Gas_Utilization

    The use of landfill gas is considered a green fuel source because it offsets the use of environmentally damaging fuels such as oil or natural gas, destroys the heat-trapping gas methane, and the gas is generated by deposits of waste that are already in place. 450 of the 2,300 landfills in the United States have operational landfill gas ...