It lands in a garbage bin and is later taken to a garbage dump by a garbage truck.
Once trash has been thrown down the garbage chute, it falls into a dumpster. A garbage truck will come once a week to empty the garbage truck and take the trash to the dump.
No, she just went down the garbage chute. She's perfectly fine.
no
it goes to a landfill
Some one will pick it up
A laundry chute is a metal shaft down a multi-storey building which usually has an opening on each floor and ends in the basement. It is similar to a garbage chute in that it takes the thing it is named after and delivers it to an appropriate location. A laundry chute will generally deliver dirty laundry to the laundry area of the building for washing. ~Machiavelli
It falls and break
You put him down the garbage disposal.
loads of squirrels carry her into the garbage disposal...
He tried to shoot his gun down the laundry chute.
I am not going to answer it because you can draw things yourself
When a parachute opens and falls, air beneath it is compressed in the canopy. The compressed air holds the chute open, and the open chute presents a large cross sectional area to the air in the direction it is moving (which is down). The large cross section of the open chute means that as it moves through the air, the whole area of the open chute will present a "front" to the air, and it will make it difficult for the air to move out and up past the chute (or make it difficult for the chute to move down through the air, whichever you prefer). The net result is that the chute and its load (a person, a cargo pack, or whatever) won't be able to move nearly as quickly through the air as the load alone without the chute for drag.If you wish to think through the problem and investigate further, you'll discover that the pressure in the chute is highest at the top in the middle. If a jumper opens his chute and a panel or two is blown out in some kind of failure, the jumper will have to make a decision about whether to cut away and open a reserve, open a reserve without cutting the primary chute away (and risking a tangle), or just riding the primary chute in with the blown panels. If the panels that have failed are in the sides of the chute, the incident is not as serious as if the panels that blew out are in the top. As the top is the higher pressure area of the chute, a blown panel is much more serious there as air at higher pressure is escaping through the chute (rather than out from under it and around it), and this will provide less "slowing" for the load on the chute. Again, think it through and consider what air is doing as the chute moves down through it and you'll be able to puzzle it out.