History Of Recycling

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WASTE & WANT Social History of Trash Garbage Recycling+
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Most popular History Of Recycling auctions

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WASTE & WANT Social History of Trash Garbage Recycling+
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Lastest History Of Recycling auctions

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WASTE & WANT Social History of Trash Garbage Recycling+
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End Date: Wednesday Mar-21-2012 9:44:52 PDT
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Lastest History Of Recycling auctions

Most popular history of recycling eBay auctions:

WASTE & WANT Social History of Trash Garbage Recycling+
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End Date: Wednesday Mar-21-2012 9:44:52 PDT
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Nature Stored, Nature Studied: Collections, Conservation and Allied Research at the Natural History Museum

Nature Stored, Nature Studied: Collections, Conservation and Allied Research at the Natural History Museum

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Nature Stored, Nature Studied: Collections, Conservation and Allied Research at the Natural History Museum

Nature Stored, Nature Studied: Collections, Conservation and Allied Research at the Natural History Museum

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Trashformations Recycled Art Competition

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From an egret made of milk jugs to a copper butterfly, reused and recyclable materials are finding their way to the Florida Museum of Natural History. The Alachua County Office of Waste Alternatives and the Florida Museum of Natural History are hosting “Trashformations,” a juried student recycled art show and competition. The competition begins at 5:30 pm on November 20, 2009 at the Florida Museum of Natural History (in the University of Florida Cultural Plaza, SW 34th Street and Hull Road, Gainesville). All artwork entered in the contest must be comprised of 70% or more recycled/recyclable/reused materials. Cash prizes will be awarded for winning entries in middle school, high school and college categories. There will also be The Waste Watcher and Museum awards. Applications (to participate) must be submitted by November 6, at 5 pm Click here for a printable application/brochure. The Trashformations exhibit is free and open to the public. For more information, contact the Alachua County Office of Waste Alternatives at 352-374-5213.

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Does the FAA check your personal PLEASE HELP home Internet history?

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Question by : Does the FAA check your personal PLEASE HELP home Internet history?
I am a gay teen and my mother is against it. We live with her boyfriend, who works in the FAA Oklahoma. She tells me that they check home Internet connections and that if I have anything on my computer. It will show up, along with my history, and he will lose his job. Now to me this seems a little far fetched, even unconstitutional. Needless to say I am still frightened of the fact of him losing his job, not the fact of my history. He is an I.T. If this helps I also use “Eraser” to erase my Internet history recycle bin, an unused harddrive space once a week. Please help me!

Best answer:

Answer by Brian
being gay is not illegal. unless the internet is being provided by a military/FAA/government source(NMCI) there is nothing wrong with looking at porn. the TYPE of porn only matters if the porn is illegal(animals, kids, rape, torture, etc).

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1 comment - What do you think?  Posted by Recycle XS - January 15, 2012 at 2:33 am

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What’s the history of recycling?

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Question by wisley_ted_snipes: What’s the history of recycling?

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Answer by tirtdsky
Recycling is the collection of used materials that would otherwise be waste to be broken down and remade into new products. Similarly, reuse is collecting waste such as food and drink containers to be cleaned, refilled and resold. Proponents of recycling say that it prevents waste and reduces the consumption of new raw materials. Commonly recycled materials include glass, paper, aluminum, asphalt, and steel. These materials can be derived either from pre-consumer waste (materials used in manufacturing) or post-consumer waste (materials discarded by the consumer).Many manufactured products are not readily biodegradable and take up space in landfills or must be incinerated. Recycling is an alternative to this. In fact, now there are machines that can recycle waste into energy sources and water. In theory, recycling would allow a continuing reuse of materials for the same purpose. In practice, recycling most often extends the useful life of a material, but in a less-versatile form. For example, when paper is recycled, the fibers shorten, making it less useful for high grade papers. Other materials can suffer from contamination, making them unsuitable for food packaging.

Of the 24 OECD-countries where figures were available, only 16% of household waste was recycled in 2002.

US issues
A neighbourhood recycling station in Oxford, England.
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A neighbourhood recycling station in Oxford, England.

State support for recycling may be more expensive than alternatives such as landfill; recycling efforts in New York City in the USA cost $ 57 million per year.1 Environmentalists argue that the benefits to society from recycling compensate for any difference in cost.

A number of U.S. states, such as California, Hawaii, Oregon, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts, Iowa, Michigan and New York have passed laws that establish deposits or refund values on beverage containers in order to promote recycling. Most are five cents per can or bottle. Michigan’s deposit is 10 cents.

Some cities, such as New York and Seattle, have even created laws that enforce fines upon citizens who throw away certain recyclable materials.
[edit]

Reuse
The 600ml brown bottle are the “standard beer reused bottle” in Brazil.
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The 600ml brown bottle are the “standard beer reused bottle” in Brazil.

One form of recycling is the reuse of goods, especially bottles. Reuse is distinguished from most forms of recycling, where the good is reduced to a raw material and used in the making of a new good (example: crushing of bottles to make glass for new bottles). Refillable bottles are used extensively in many European countries; for example in Denmark, 98% of bottles are refillable, and 98% of those are returned by consumers. [1] These systems are typically supported by deposit laws and other regulations.

In some developing nations like India and Pakistan, the cost of new bottles often forces manufacturers to collect and refill old glass bottles for selling cola and other drinks. India and Pakistan also have a way of reusing old newspapers: “Kabadiwalas” buy these from the readers for scrap value and reuse them in packaging or in recycling plants. These scrap intermediaries also help in disposing other articles and metals from the consumers and is a lucrative business for the resellers. [citation needed]

In the former East Germany, organic household waste was collected and used as fodder for pigs. This integrated system was made possible by the state’s control of agriculture; the complexities of continuing it in a market economy after German reunification meant the system had to be discontinued. Organic household waste is still collected separately in some towns in Germany, and may be used for fertilizer or landfilled in more sensitive locations where other waste cannot be.

In North America, organic household waste, especially yard waste such as leaves on a seasonal basis, is often collected and heaped up to form compost.
[edit]

History
Recycling and rubbish bin in a German railway station.
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Recycling and rubbish bin in a German railway station.

Recycling is generally at its peak during wartime or energy shortages. Massive government promotion campaigns were carried out in World War II in every country involved in the war, urging citizens to conserve metals and fiber. These resource conservation programs established during the war were continued in some natural resource-poor countries, such as Japan, after the war ended.

In the USA, the next big investment in recycling occurred in the 1970s, due to rises in energy costs (recycling aluminum uses only 5% of the energy required by virgin production; glass, paper and metals have less dramatic but very significant energy savings when recycled feedstock is used). The passage of the Clean Water Act in the USA created strong demand for bleached paper (office paper whose fiber has already been bleached white increased in value as water effluent became more expensive).

On September 17, 1981, the first ever blue box recycling program was launched in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. Today, more than 90% of Ontario households have access to recycling programs and annually they divert more than 650,000 tonnes (1 tonne = 2,200 pounds) of secondary resource materials. The “blue box” program has expanded in various forms throughout Canada and to countries around the world such as United Kingdom, France and Australia, serving more than 40 million households in countries around the world. Windsor, Ontario uses a red box for paper and cardboard items only while Ottawa, Ontario uses a black box for this purpose.

In 1987, a barge called the Mobro 4000, containing a little over 3,000 tons of garbage departed from Islip, New York to deposit its load of garbage in Morehead City, North Carolina. However, before it reached its destination, rumors that it contained medical waste caused officials at Morehead City to deny the barge permission to unload its garbage. As a result, the barge traveled down the East coast of the United States searching for a place to unload, eventually being denied in Mexico and Belize. The barge finally returned to Islip, where the trash was incinerated after a brief legal battle. The barge’s journey became a small media event. According the Federal Reserve bank of Boston [2], Kelly Ferguson (editor of a pulp and paper industry newsletter) [3], and conservative columnist John Tierney [4], media coverage of the Mobro 4000 led to the false public perception that American landfills were nearly out of space. They say that this perception led to increased public interest in programs to recycle household goods.
A recycling and rubbish bin in a Berlin public-transport station
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A recycling and rubbish bin in a Berlin public-transport station

Another major event that initiated recycling efforts occurred in 1989 when the city of Berkeley, California, banned the use of polystyrene packaging for keeping McDonald’s hamburgers warm. One effect of this ban was to raise the ire of management at Dow Chemical, the world’s largest manufacturer of Polystyrene, which led to the first major efforts to show that plastics can be recycled. By 1999, there were 1,677 companies in the USA alone involved in the post-consumer plastics recycling business.

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A History of the World in 6 Glasses

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A History of the World in 6 Glasses

From beer to Coca-Cola, the six drinks that have helped shape human history
Throughout human history, certain drinks have done much more than just quench thirst. As Tom Standage relates with authority and charm, six of them have had a surprisingly pervasive influence on the course of history, becoming the defining drink during a pivotal historical period.

A History of the World in 6 Glasses tells the story of humanity from the Stone Age to the 21st century through the lens of beer, wi

List Price: $ 15.95 Price: $ 8.09

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