Of course not. Iron is found in nature as is, even. A huge amount of iron made into an item by man will still rust & become with earth, even though it may take longer to break down than vegetation, for instance. In small amounts, it is as biodegradable as food, & indeed is IN food.
Yes, of course. It is usually made up of p.lastic materials which are non biodegradable.
YES
sugar
no mercury is non-biodegerable
silver is non biodegrable
They are.
No. Iron rusts but it is not biodegradable.
Material that's nonliving (excluding dead organic matter) is non-biodegradable. Plastic, metal, styrofoam, and corrugated cardboard are non-biodegradable, while a dead tree, animal waste, and skin cells are biodegradable. A difference between biodegradable trash and non-biodegradable trash is that the biodegradable can be thrown out into a backyard and eventually turn into soil or something that other living things can reuse, while non-biodegradable trash can be recycled, as in reused for its original purposed, usually for humans.
biodegradable
Biodegradable can be broken down by the earth naturally, non- biodegradable can not.
We segregate our biodegradable and non-biodegradable wastes so that all biodegradable can be used as fertilizers while the non biodegradable can be recycled to make different creative products.
Abs is not biodegradable.
tissue is biodegradable
Nope. Glass is not organic (contains no carbon) and as such is non biodegradable.
No. Iron rusts but it is not biodegradable.
biodegradable
yes Aerosol biodegradable