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If it a class dissection some of the most important safety procedures to follow include the following: * Avoid contact, such as to the eyes, mouth, or other sensitive areas, with any chemicals used to preserve the specimen. Also thoroughly rinse off the specimen off the chemicals before beginning dissection. * If the chemicals do come in contact with your eyes, know where the nearest eye-wash station is. * Firmly secure specimen to your dissecting pan. DO NOT dissect specimen while holding it. * Handle the scalpel with extreme care and always cut away from others and yourself. * Properly dispose of the dissected specimen and organs as directed by your teacher or leader in the dissection. * Clean your dissection area and tools thoroughly and return the tools to their correct storage places. * WASH YOUR HANDS AFTER DISSECTION There are more guidelines at the link given below.
1. Wear safety gloves 2. Wash your hands when your done 3. Dispose of the specimen after the activity
There are many websites on the internet that provide information on recycling or disposing of plastic materials. Among them are Earth 911, Ask, Wikipedia, and many state and local websites.
No, the word 'dispose' is a verb: dispose, disposes, disposing, disposed.The noun forms for the verb to dispose are disposal, disposition, disposer, and the gerund, disposing.
It is a central vacuole
Use proper tools and techniques to minimize damage to the specimen. Work in a well-ventilated area to avoid inhaling fumes from preservatives. Follow a systematic approach, documenting your observations and findings throughout the dissection process. Dispose of biological materials appropriately following local regulations.
If it a class dissection some of the most important safety procedures to follow include the following: * Avoid contact, such as to the eyes, mouth, or other sensitive areas, with any chemicals used to preserve the specimen. Also thoroughly rinse off the specimen off the chemicals before beginning dissection. * If the chemicals do come in contact with your eyes, know where the nearest eye-wash station is. * Firmly secure specimen to your dissecting pan. DO NOT dissect specimen while holding it. * Handle the scalpel with extreme care and always cut away from others and yourself. * Properly dispose of the dissected specimen and organs as directed by your teacher or leader in the dissection. * Clean your dissection area and tools thoroughly and return the tools to their correct storage places. * WASH YOUR HANDS AFTER DISSECTION There are more guidelines at the link given below.
exocytosis
To dispose of waste materials that you do not want in your pants or on the floor.
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Wrap your specimen in the original wrapping and give to your instructor to dispose of.
Contact your local transfer station. They can tell you what, when and where.
The smoke that results is toxic.
donate them to a wig maker
exocytosis
When you dispose your materials they decay and rot causing an odor in your garbage. Glad to Help! :)
Exocytosis is the method that most cells use in order to dispose of large molecules of waste materials.