Yes, land can be recycled.
When farmers use a land for a certain crop, they will typically use it until they've sucked the nutrients out of it.
However, different crops use different nutrients. Thus, many farmers will rotate their crops, growing different crops in the same plot different years.
Also, if they stop using the land for crops, a lot of times the soil can regain its normal nutrients composition (via rain, plants/animals pooping/dying, etc) and the normal plant species for that area can re-inhabit it.
Promised Land - 1996 Recycled 2-12 was released on: USA: 8 January 1998
Burried in land fills
they get dumped in a land field
Land resources can be preserved just by leaving them alone. This is a possibility if what has already been tapped is reused and recycled.
Rain is naturally recycled. Today, a rain drop could land in Kentucky. In a week, that same rain drop could land in Mongolia.
Paper, tins, glass and garden waste all get recycled, the rest goes into land fill.
It is estimated that only 6% of plastic water bottles are actually recycled instead of being put in landfills. In 2012 a census found that 33.6 million plastic water bottles ended up in landfills and 2 million were recycled.
to increase the amount being recycled and decrease the amount ending up in land fills.
if noone recycled then we will be living to our noses in garbadge. without recycling there will be at least 2x as much garbadge in land fills because alot of people recycle. i can bet at at least 1 person on every block in the country recycles
Webkinz cannot be recycled because cotton is not meant to be recycled.
It will be recycled soon by cutting them and being recycled into millions of paper
YES,THEY CAN BE RECYCLED