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
it goes to a landfill
Some one will pick it up
You can draw it yourself.
I am not going to answer it because you can draw things yourself
I've ignored recycling. Answer will vary depending on where you are in the world. Generally in the U.S.: organic material in refuse -> garbage hauler -> landfill -> anaerobically decompose into landfill gas (organic material) -> landfill gas goes out into environment, or is destroyed in flare or is used in renewable energy project inorganic material in refuse -> garbage hauler -> landfill -> stays in landfill
It will collected by an authorised carrier and transported to a land fill site where its is basically ploughed in to the ground. This is where enviomentalists are in opposition as most of what goes in the ground will take thousands of years to rot, if at all. This takes up valuable land and can contaminate land needed in future for food production or living space. Its estimated the 905 of the household waste thrown in land fill can be recycled to save raw materials being used and this will in turn reduce the amount ploughed in to the ground by 90%
There are many Latin words for the English word chute. These words happen to be, prolabor, ruo, procido, cunica, recumbo and procumbo.
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
'chute
chute
They had a chute out!