The history of a city, as told through its trash

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Today’s garbage is tomorrow’s archaeology.

Humans have been tossing stuff into rivers for thousands of years, whether it’s trash, wished-upon coins, lost items, or dramatically dumped, once-significant objects. That makes the river bed into a microcosm of human history and the development of cities–and a rich source for archaeologists.

A 15-year project to excavate two locations in Amsterdam’s river Amstel, one in the city center and one at the river’s mouth, is currently reaching its conclusion. Prompted by a complex civil engineering project–a north-south metro line that goes underneath the river–archaeologists got the go-ahead to dig two immense holes, each about 100 feet deep, and excavate whatever they could. The fruits of the project, called Below the Surface, are now online, with an interactive photo catalog designed by Netherlands-based firm Fabrique showcasing 20,000 objects uncovered beneath the project. The items range from 1980s cell phones, contemporary ID cards, and a plastic camera film case, to centuries-old coins, pottery, and fishhooks. And that’s just a small fraction of the 700,000 items they found in these two small cross-sections of the riverbed.

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Toilet Paper to Undergo Biggest Change in 100 Years – Going Tubeless

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Tubeless toilet paper rolls

The toilet paper roll is about to undergo its biggest change in 100 years: going tubeless.  On Monday, Kimberly-Clark, one of the world’s biggest makers of household paper products, will begin testing Scott Naturals Tube-Free toilet paper at Walmart and Sam’s Club stores throughout the Northeast. If sales take off, it may introduce the line nationally and globally — and even consider adapting the technology into its paper towel brands.

 

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High-tech Recycling Bins Will Tell on Residents Who Don’t Recycle…. and Fine Them For It

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RFID chips will allow city workers to monitor how often residents roll carts to the curb for collection.

We’ve heard the promise: in the future, everything’s connected. But when Cleveland rolls out its new RFID-enabled recycling bins next year, ones that know if you’re using them and report you if you’re not, you might long to disconnect.

 

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The City of Garbage

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A lone child in the valley of garbage

Manshiet Nasser is a neighborhood located in Cairo, Egypt. People refer to it as the City of Garbage because trash from all over Cairo end up there. It is not a landfill. Rather, people who live there survive on sorting through garbage and selling whatever is useful. They claim that 80% of the waste is recycled and resold. (Amazing pics)

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Move Over Trash Cans – Introducing the Solar Powered Trash Compactor

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The BigBelly Solar Trash Compactor

A growing number of cities and municipalities are testing solar-powered trash compactors as a way to go green and save some green.
Communities in 46 states, as well as some state parks and colleges, are replacing regular trash cans, according to Richard Kennelly, vice president of BigBelly Solar marketing, which manufactures the devices.
Officials in states including California, Arizona and Pennsylvania say the trash compactors save long-term costs by reducing the number of trash pickups.
Powered by a solar panel, the compactor holds up to 32 gallons of compacted trash.
The newer models can send text messages to a central server when the cans are full to “minimize miles” in the trash pickup route, Kennelly says.
The cost of the cans varies. New York City leased solar-powered compactors for about $4,000 each, says Vito Turso, the Department of Sanitation’s deputy commissioner for public information and community affairs.
Philadelphia spent about $3,700 to purchase each compactor and $800 for recycling cans, Streets Commissioner Clarina Tollson says.
Pasadena, California, has deployed 12 of the containers over the past two years and bought 40 more in November that will be put in place this year, says Gabriel Silva, public works environmental program manager.
The trash compactors have helped beautify the area, said Gina Tleel, executive director for South Lake Business Association.
When Arizona State University began using the compactors, Refuse Coordinator Ted Woods doubted most students would use them.
“Boy, I had to eat my words, they work great,” says Woods, who said the containers have reduced the daily trash pickup to once a week.
The university received six donated compactors from Pepsi in 2006 and added 10 units in 2008, said Bonny Bentzin, director of university sustainability practices.
The compactors were installed at Georgetown University in October 2009, says William del Vecchio, manager of recycling and solid waste disposal at the university.
“Personally, I’m glad to see the university continuing its push for sustainability efforts,” said student Calen Angert, who uses the cans.
Student Nora White, who has used the bins on campus at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College, says they are a good reminder to recycle. “With them right beside each other, it puts it in your conscious,” she says.
Some states, including California, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Washington, got Department of Energy grants to purchase their solar-powered compactors.
Philadelphia used its grant to replace 700 litter baskets with 500 of the trash compactors and 210 sidewalk recycling cans in April 2009, Tollson says.
Not only have the containers helped with the green initiative, but they also reduced trash pickups from 17 times per week to five, she says.
As a result, employees have been reassigned where they are needed most.
“Philadelphia will save $13 million in cumulative collection over the next 10 years,” Tollson says.
New York City received mixed results when it tested earlier models from February to March in 2005, Turso says. He sees purchasing more wire mesh litter baskets, which cost $125 each, as a greater advantage. The solar-powered trash bins are being tested in Brooklyn.

A growing number of cities and municipalities are testing solar-powered trash compactors as a way to go green and save some green. Communities in 46 states, as well as some state parks and colleges, are replacing regular trash cans, according to Richard Kennelly, vice president of BigBelly Solar marketing, which manufactures the devices.

Officials in states including California, Arizona and Pennsylvania say the trash compactors save long-term costs by reducing the number of trash pickups. (Video)

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Expanding Islands of Trash Afloat Around the World’s Oceans

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Rubbish in the Pacific

Aboard the Alguita, 1,000 miles northeast of Hawaii — In this remote patch of the Pacific Ocean, hundreds of miles from any national boundary, the detritus of human life is collecting in a swirling current so large that it defies precise measurement.

 

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The Dustbot: Robot Trash Collector

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Co-funded by the European Commission, the $3.9 million (USD) Dustbot project aims to build a moderately-sized robot to navigate the narrow streets that garbage trucks can’t reach.  The pictures were taken from Dustbot’s trial run in Peccioli, Italy. (Pics)

 

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UpCycling: Even Better Than ReCycling!

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Before ReCycling Try UpCycling

The recyclers are out in force. Whether it’s using a local recycle centre or a council-provided green bin, it’s never been easier to get your household waste processed back into useful raw materials. But that takes energy – and why spend that energy when this “rubbish” can be turned into something useful in its present form?

Here are some of our suggestions for making the most of what you have already…

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The Great Internet Migratory Box Of Electronics Junk

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OH LOOKIE! A BOX OF JUNK?

The Great Internet Migratory Box of Electronics Junk is sort roving flea market meets Internet meme.

The idea, hatched by the guys over at Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories, is to send a box containing random electronics junk to somebody who would take a few pieces, write about them, add some item, and then send it on its merry way to somebody else.

You can request a box or even start one of your own …

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