Non-biodegradable materials are those that cant be broken down within a reasonable time span. Some examples include plastics, batteries, glass, computers and cellphones.
New research now shows that some plastics do break down.
Items usually refers to physical things, and is a concrete noun. Items could be abstract if it metaphorically refers to items that are not physical things, such as news items.
A gross is 144 items.
is compensation received an exceptional income
The everyday items that use air are humans like you and animals.
Some items that might be gross include worms, fleas, ticks, slime, seaweed when it touches your feet in the water, and mud. Other items that might be gross include spoiled food, rotted meat, or even vomit.
Yes.
We are the only organisms that we know of that can understand and apply scientific knowledge to create nonbiodegradable substances.
its plastic
No, paper will biodegrade (it is an organic material).
it is a nonbiodegradable substance, it corrodes, slowly.
Nonbiodegradable waste is basically "trash that doesn't decompose naturally". Meaning that bacteria will not break it down and turn it into topsoil. Thinks like banana peels will decompose very quickly, thus they are biodegradable. But plastics, foams, and metals will not decompose, thus they are nonbiodegradable.
So it can...um, BIODEGRADE PERHAPS?!
biodegradable nonbiodegradable are produce in the market
No. Cow dung is organic material which definitely makes it biodegradable.
by not throwing the plasticts in the groud is on of the way to control nonbiodegradalle waste
Biodegradable materials will rot, weather, or rust and 'return to nature'. Wood, paper, and even most metals are biodegradable to various degrees. Nonbiodegradable materials will not break down naturally. Most plastics and synthetic materials are nonbiodegradable.
nonbiodegradable means that a particular object is not able to break down naturally, such as man made plastic.