Rogers said that Americans waste most of their lives on the earth, but few people are thinking about garbage. Rogers aims to demonstrate the internal operation of garbage flow from garbage trucks to landfill sites, incinerators, or unknown parts. Rogers also said that he did not do anything in the history of reducing the long-term environmental damage of garbage, emphasizing New York and also includes a chapter on the history of waste removal and disposal. Initial hygiene facilities in the city and multinational waste projects of billions of dollars This book is consistently attractive and depicts the myriad problems posed by national waste generation, but the specific example of the reader There is almost no countermeasure taken to improve the situation of garbage, Rogers argues as follows. "It is a good thing for consumers to make choices when considering the environment." But this book is funny and tends to be misunderstood and neglected in the industry. "
Heather Rogers's "Tomorrow passed: The trashful living of trash" can be seen in the history of recent trash. As we might guess, that is not what we always existed. Garbage is the focal point of economic, social and technical forces, usually hidden under the trash. Rogers' book is very attractive, taught, and amazing. It is well written, eagerly debated, and respectable. Rogers started with two introductions. In the first part, as you can imagine, I've listed a couple of general parameters on waste production. The second is to introduce garbage from the roadside to the final destination and define what Rogers calls "garbage flow". If you had these two measuring sticks, Rogers sneaked into her main story, it is the history of garbage.
Heather Roger's article is gone tomorrow. The hidden life of garbage provides a persuasive view of excessive social and uneconomical mass production (585). Rogers explains the process of collection, disposal and disposal of waste and waste (Roger 585). From your kitchen to the roadside, to collection trucks, and to processing equipment where they separate, recycle, burn, compress and store garbage on the earth (Roger 585). Roger says "... dump consists of a series of cells covered by the earth" (Rogers 586). "Cells" have been used to fill garbage in garbage dumping sites for decades, but in today's cell there are special materials to prevent debris from leaking into the ground and rain I will. The cell can reach 100 acres, up to 100 feet (586). It will take years to fill the cells, and when the cells are full it will be "covered" and cover a few feet of dirt (586-587).