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Animal latrine. Animal latrines ( latrine areas, [ 1] animal toilets, defecation sites) are places where wildlife animals habitually defecate and urinate. Many kinds of animals are highly specific in this respect and have stereotyped routines, including approach and departure. [ 2] Many of them have communal, i.e., shared, latrines.
episodes. The following is an episode list for the American television sitcom Step by Step. The series originally ran for six seasons on ABC from September 20, 1991 to August 15, 1997, then moving to CBS for its seventh and final season from September 19, 1997, to June 26, 1998. A total of 160 episodes were produced, spanning seven seasons.
Pit latrine. A pit latrine, also known as pit toilet, is a type of toilet that collects human waste in a hole in the ground. [2] Urine and feces enter the pit through a drop hole in the floor, which might be connected to a toilet seat or squatting pan for user comfort. [2] Pit latrines can be built to function without water (dry toilet) or they ...
Defecation. Defecation (or defaecation) follows digestion, and is a necessary process by which organisms eliminate a solid, semisolid, or liquid waste material known as feces from the digestive tract via the anus or cloaca. The act has a variety of names ranging from the common, like pooping or crapping, to the technical, e.g. bowel movement ...
Community-led total sanitation. CLTS triggering process: Community members in Ghana are drawing a map of open defecation for their community. Community-led total sanitation (CLTS) is an approach used mainly in developing countries to improve sanitation and hygiene practices in a community. The approach tries to achieve behavior change in mainly ...
A Blair toilet with an exhaust pipe. The Blair Toilet (a.k.a. Blair Latrine) is a pit toilet designed in the 1970s. It was a result of large-scale projects to improve rural sanitation in Rhodesia under UDI at the Blair Research Institute, and then deployed further during the 1980s after Zimbabwean Independence.
Toilets come in various forms around the world, including flush toilets used by sitting or squatting, and dry toilets like pit latrines. A toilet[ n 1 ] is a piece of sanitary hardware that collects human urine and feces, and sometimes toilet paper, usually for disposal. Flush toilets use water, while dry or non-flush toilets do not.
Two scientists design a new toilet cleaner which supposedly "kills all bacteria". However, a mutated, living bacterium appears and gets into the sewer system. Coming out of Lenore's toilet, the bacterium attacks Lenore while she is sleeping. Lenore manages to trap it with the plunger and flush it back down the toilet.