to a landfill
Garbage. You put Garbage in the Garbage.
Well, there are more than two, strictly speaking, but oxygen and moisture content--although it should be understood that one can also have too much moisture.
The garbage of Garbage Island comes from mostly the United States
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle ! Garbage, Garbage, Garbage! Why would We through this out ?
temperature; warmth speeds it up, cold slows it down. moisture; if it is moist it will decay quicker oxygen; if there is a good oxygen flow it should decay quicker. these all speed up decay because the bacteria and fungi that cause decay need these conditions to thrive and multiply
When you dispose your materials they decay and rot causing an odor in your garbage. Glad to Help! :)
Aluminum takes more than 100 years to decay. If this were to be thrown in the garbage, it would take up to 100 years completely decay.
There are different types of decay, such as radioactive decay and decomposition. Depending on the type of decay, different factors can affect the speed of the process. Here are some possible answers: For radioactive decay, the speed of decay is usually constant and independent of external factors, such as temperature, pressure, or chemical reactions. However, there are some rare exceptions, such as electron capture and bound-state beta decay, where the decay rate can be slightly altered by the chemical environment or the presence of other particles. For decomposition, the speed of decay depends on several factors, such as temperature, moisture, oxygen, and the presence of decomposers. Generally, higher temperature, more moisture, more oxygen, and more decomposers will speed up the decomposition process, as they facilitate the chemical and biological reactions that break down organic matter.
No, but hot temperatures do.
2 factors speed up the process 1.Heat 2.The biomass is loosely packed
Most garbage is not radioactive. Garbage is decomposed biologically by bacteria, fungi, earthworms, maggots, etc. However some garbage (e.g. plastics, glass) do not decompose and simply take up space in the dump or landfill, unless recycled in some way.
paper leaf cotton glass
No, radioactive decay is not affected by temperature, at least, not in anything like a normal range. At millions of degrees, yes, it would speed up.
Because it has a lot of animals
ruin, rot, decay, decompose
Cities on Speed Cairo Garbage - 2009 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-PG