Try this website
Good Luck!
2006-06-19 07:53:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
i need to summary the book rubbish the archaeology of garbage?
2015-08-18 13:49:13
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answer #2
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answered by Classie 1
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To say that archeology has proven the Bible to be real is a fallacy. In fact, archeology has proven many spiritual aspects of the Bible to not have happened, or to have happened out of chronological order. If I tell you one thing about the Bible that is false, will that cause you to lose your faith in God? Probably not. So why are you trying to steal away the faith of Mormons with your accusations? Many ex-mormons have an axe to grind with the church, and you plainly can't trust those who maliciously spread lies about the church. You mentioned that not one non-mormon archaeologist has ever validated the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon based on archaeological evidence. Well, can you find one mormon archaeologist that doesn't think the Book of Mormon didn't happen? With your kind of logic, you're just going to go round and round in circles, never learning anything. Why don't you just go on your way, content with your preconceived notions, and leave us alone.
2016-03-14 21:53:44
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Rubbish!!!
The material evidence of our civilization, lovingly preserved in landfill, diverges considerably from our image of ourselves. This book is full of amazing news gathered in two decades by the Tucson-based Garbage Project. The debris accumulation in Troy raised the city 4.7 feet per century. New York City has risen 6 to 30 feet since its founding. The methane generated in landfills is being used in some places as a power source, but there is relatively little actual rotting going on landfills, and "biodegradable" products (including even fresh food) are preserved perfectly for decades.
The urban poor in Mexico City "consume proportionally more candy -- pound for pound, the most expensive type of food in the city -- than their more affluent neighbors." People my age may remember paper and scrap drives during World War II in America and Britain. It turns out they produced were kept on for "morale" reasons. In modern recycling, far the most economically lucrative yield is aluminum from beverage cans. Tires can't be landfilled; they always pop up to the top.
Environmentalist have persuaded the American public that landfill is made up of 20-30 percent fast-food packaging, 25-40 percent expanded foam, and 25-45 percent disposable diapers. ("The Disposable Diaper Myth," in WER #60, Fall 1988, declared in a tone of outrage that 3-4 percent of landfill was diapers.) The actual figures: 0.59-1.28 percent disposable diapers; 1 percent foam; 0.33 percent fast-food packaging. The real villains are paper (40 percent); construction debris (12 percent); and food and yard waste (7 percent).
2006-06-27 22:36:21
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answer #4
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answered by medhruv 4
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After reading as much as you can of the book, try the editorial and customer reviews,also.
2006-07-03 13:38:37
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answer #5
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answered by ianthra2010 3
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Try reading the book. That makes summarizing it a lot easier!
2006-07-03 02:28:46
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answer #6
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answered by Privratnik 5
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