From Yahoo Answers:
Every commercial gum has a gum base, just like every trophy has a trophy base, and in some cases the two are disturbingly similar. The base makes up a percentage of the gum; the remaining ingredients are flavor and sugar. Gum bases are the part that we chew and chew and chew long after the flavor is just a memory. They are grouped in categories: elastomers (including natural and synthetic rubbers), resins, plasticizers (such as waxes, vegetable oils, and glycerides), adjuvants (including calcium carbonate, talc, or other charging agents), and antioxidants. In other words, the gum is, at base, plastic or rubber or wax.If you have swallowed it before you have had sex then you have to swallow the semen of a ginger asian black man. they are very rare and hard to find as they are crafty little fxxkers. however they can be loured out of their dusty underground caverns with a bowl of lucky charms dipped in fried donkey diarrhea with herpes infected penis slices) BUT...if you have had sex..then all you need to do is perform oral sex on a hobo while being anally penetrated by a ladyman....good luck my friend and happy decomposing
Having 50 or 30 years to digest is just a myth. It takes as long as it does to digest regular food which is 1-3 days.
Its undigestable, but still comes out the same time everything else does in your
about a week or two weeks
you must cut it the place i in compost bin the wait for a few decates
It takes 1000 years for it too biodegrade and that is if it is buried. :)
5 to 10 years.
300 years
1o years
Eraser is made out of rubber. If exposed under the sun, an eraser will take between 50 to 80 years to biodegrade.
10 years
How long it takes for an aluminum can to biodegrade
It can take tin cans anywhere from 50 to 100-years to biodegrade. The decomposition is very dependent on the environment where the material is decomposing.
Electronics can take multiple years to decompose. Electronical waste is called e-waste. It can take up to 1,000,000's of years to biodegrade.
a long time.
No, not decomposed in nature. Clean burning though in waste ovens.
Foam? Like old coffee cups and such? They never biodegrade. Unlike plastic that will take a thousand years foam will never biodegrade. In ten millions years of something is digging in the ground, it could find your cup that you left behind.