hazardous wastehazardous waste.
In Elizabethan England, the theatre was considered a hangout for unsavory characters such as prostitutes and thieves. Also, actors were considered very low at the time too and would not receive a Christian burial unless they denounced their trade on their death bed. This belief also goes back to the middle ages, with wandering theatre troupes and the types of people who were in them.
Health and hygiene was quite bad in Elizabethan England. Times were hard - people only bathed once or twice a year! Even Queen Elizabeth didn't wash more than twice a year...maybe only once! They didn't have soap, and only rinsed dishes out with water, rather than our modern, much more hygienic habits of using liquid soap. People washed so little because there was very little running water except from rivers or streams. People used wells; taps were non-existant, so gaining access to clean water was much more difficult then it is today. This lack of hygiene and living in a close community meant that illnesses spread like wildfire and were very hard to snuff out. People's 'cures' for diseases didn't help either; in fact they usually made illnesses worse...or killed the person altogether. An example of a disease is the plague (also known as the 'Black Death', although this was during the Medievil Period). Bubonic plague was the most common; people fell in in days and had black boils on their body. Hundreds of thousands of people died from the disease; thousands in London alone every day. Many people worked outside for a living; on farms or servants for the richer folk. In the country especially, the people lived in close partnership with their animals - which is also not very hygienic. So, in conclusion, the people in Elizabethan England were not very hygienic at all... I hope this helps Love beasle95
Chapel Waste is 178 cm.
William H. Waste was born in 1868.
Up they bum
People poop in toilets because it is a convenient and hygienic way to dispose of waste. Toilets are connected to a sewage system that safely carries waste away, preventing the spread of diseases and odors. Using toilets is also a social norm and a standard practice in most cultures.
Toilets are very important because they get rid of toxic waste. These toilets prevent waste from building up in one location and making you sick.
washing their clothes, putting their waste in it??
To get rid of our bodily waste.
to show how much waste people throw away in their lifetime
Yes, but not in the way we think of flushing toilets. In private houses, a bucket or two of water was used to flush away the waste and prevent odor. In the public toilets latrines, there was a stream of running water beneath the seats to flush away waste.
They can get their food easily from the waste over which throw.
Toilets in rural areas can be classified into two main types: pit latrines and dry toilets. Pit latrines use a hole in the ground to collect waste, while dry toilets separate solid and liquid waste to aid decomposition. These types of toilets are often simpler in design and construction compared to flush toilets, making them more suitable for rural settings.
The Romans made toilets for the same reason that we make toilets----to go into. However the Romans also used their toilets as garbage dumps and all household waste as well as human waste was flushed down them. And yes, the Romans still use toilets. They have them in all the houses and apartments, restaurants, public buildings, etc. in the city.
pollution
The waste from the toilets is often referred to as the airplanes garbage.