The seep into the ground (polluting aquifers that we use for drinking water) and to the surface and cause widespread environmental damage (harm to life on Earth).
When poisonous chemicals accumulate in landfills, they have the potential to leach into the soil and groundwater, contaminating the surrounding environment. This can harm local ecosystems, pollute water sources, and pose health risks to nearby communities. Proper waste management practices, such as containment systems and monitoring, are essential to mitigate these risks.
There is no problem when toxics accumulate in properly designed landfills. They are contained there and do not impact the environment. When the materials escape there is a problem.This can be prevented by:Not allowing the materials to be landfilled by seeking alternate destructive disposalEnsuring frequent checks of the landfill's integrityBinding the materials into amatrix which they cannot be moved from
It gets thrown into the landfills which pollutes the earth.
you die
Well, for starters, they are making people who live anywhere around them sick, and they also create these chemicals that seep into the ground and can contaminate the ground water. they of course are attracting varmints and other creatures that scavenge on the rotting trash, and produce methane gas (there are ways to solve that, which a lot of people of working on that now, powering buildings, plants, etc.) And they probably aren't to great for the local animals. Hope that helped. Joy L. P.
Often the materials will end up in landfills or into the water system into the ocean.
Depends on the chemicals, you get a different reaction from different ones.
Raspberries often get eaten. Chemicals may be used or misused.
Plants in phytoremediation absorb contaminants from the soil or water through their roots. They either accumulate the contaminants in their tissues or break them down into less harmful substances through various biological processes. This helps to clean up polluted environments and improve soil or water quality.
It's crunchy, but not poisonous.
the cell usually dies because the chemicals destory the cell.
Tin can take hundreds of years to break down in a landfill, contributing to environmental pollution and potential harm to wildlife. It may also release toxic chemicals into the soil and water, impacting the surrounding ecosystem. Recycling tin helps conserve natural resources and reduces waste in landfills.