Solid and Hazardous Waste Chapter 14 Complete Test Bank - Environmental Science 9e Complete Test Bank by William Cunningham. DOCX document preview.

Solid and Hazardous Waste Chapter 14 Complete Test Bank

Principles of Environmental Science, 9e (Cunningham)

Chapter 14 Solid and Hazardous Waste

1) A steady form of varied wastes that we all produce, from domestic garbage and yard waste to industrial, commercial, and construction refuse:

A) postconsumer waste

B) hazardous waste

C) solid waste

D) preconsumer waste

E) waste stream

2) Up to one-third of all commercial and industrial sites in the urban core of many big cities fall in this category:

A) e-waste

B) open dumps

C) landfills

D) brownfields

E) redfields

3) All of the following are examples of how to process or permanently store the hazardous waste we generate, except

A) incineration.

B) brownfield sites.

C) chemical processing.

D) permanent retrievable storage.

E) secure landfills.

4) This process involves using plants to absorb and accumulate toxic material. Once contaminants are absorbed into plants, the plants themselves are usually toxic and must be landfilled. The cost of this process can be less than half the cost of landfilling or treating toxic soil.

A) detoxification

B) phytoremediation

C) composting

D) bioremediation

E) fertilizing

5) "Waste stream" is a term describing

A) the steady production of all waste products that humans produce.

B) the process of eliminating domestic and commercial waste.

C) the production of solid waste, specifically.

D) the intermittent production of particular wastes.

E) the production of liquid waste, specifically.

6) In the United States about two-thirds of a ton of waste is generated for each person (including children). Compared to the United States, Japan and Europe generate about half that amount. One of the factors that probably does not contribute to this difference is

A) the United States collection and dumping processes mix and crush everything together so separation is not possible.

B) the fact that Japan is an island with limited space.

C) the high rate of recycling in Japan.

D) that people in the United States have a higher standard of living than Japan and Europe.

7) In recent decades, unregulated open dumps have ________ in developing countries.

A) nearly disappeared

B) mostly become regulated

C) remained the primary disposal method

D) been replaced by incineration and methane generation

E) been replaced by sanitary landfills

8) Landfills differ from open dumps in that

A) landfills are smaller.

B) dumps are cleaner and smell less.

C) landfilled waste is compacted and covered.

D) landfills are cheaper to operate.

E) landfills and dumps are the same thing.

9) CERCLA legislation

A) established the NPL.

B) requires the testing of the toxicity of substances.

C) requires brownfields to be developed.

D) requires the EPA to clean up toxic waste sites.

10) In the case of sanitary landfills, the cost of disposing of wastes is ________ as technology provides safer alternatives.

A) slowly increasing

B) slowly decreasing

C) staying relatively stable

D) sharply increasing

E) sharply decreasing

11) The main method for disposing of municipal wastes in the United States is ________ while ________ is the main method in Japan.

A) incineration; recycling

B) recycling; landfilling

C) landfilling; recycling

D) landfilling; incineration

E) recycling; incineration

12) Using a refillable beverage container (returnable bottles) would be an example of ________ materials.

A) reusing

B) recycling

C) reducing

D) redefining

13) Recycling, in terms of solid waste management, means

A) reusing materials.

B) melting or shredding to make new products.

C) keeping intact but putting to a new use.

D) using less of the material in production of a product.

14) Urban curbside recycling costs cities

A) a great deal, but citizens approve the expense anyway.

B) nothing at all because the materials pay for expenses.

C) more than any other disposal method.

D) far less than landfilling or incinerating.

E) nothing, in fact, all cities make money with recycling.

15) Recycling aluminum is most important for

A) saving raw materials (the ore).

B) saving energy.

C) saving landfill space.

D) reducing pollutants in the air and water.

E) All of these are correct.

16) Composting is a waste disposal method that

A) is useful only for single households.

B) is technologically complex.

C) vastly reduces total waste volumes.

D) is more environmentally costly than landfilling.

E) is not realistic for college students.

17) Individual efforts to reduce the volume of the waste stream

A) have enormous cumulative effects.

B) are fairly useful because it demonstrates to corporations that we care.

C) have some effects, but we need to target industries to reduce their waste stream instead.

D) have little effect but make people feel better.

E) matter very little.

18) The most often overlooked of the "three Rs" is

A) recycle.

B) reuse.

C) release.

D) redefine.

E) reduce.

19) Which of the following actions would probably not encourage efficiency and recycling programs?

A) discontinue energy and water subsidies to industries when they are processing raw materials

B) discontinue subsidies that favor the extraction of raw materials

C) consumers asking for and buying products made from recycled products

D) charging a surcharge on materials when purchased that is redeemable when the consumer recycles the product

E) discontinue subsidies that favor the extraction of raw materials and consumers asking for and buying products made from recycled products are correct because industries do not receive water and energy subsidies

20) Hazardous waste is anything that

A) causes human health threats.

B) severely contaminates the environment.

C) is toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic, corrosive, or explosive.

D) has the potential of causing health problems.

E) All of these are correct.

21) The National Priority List is a list of sites that

A) we currently have money to deal with.

B) deserve research for possible cleanup.

C) will probably never be cleaned up.

D) seriously require cleanup to prevent further environmental and health damage.

E) are especially vulnerable to hazardous wastes (e.g., aquifer recharge zones) and are not available for future building permits.

22) The questions of ________ and ________ are among the biggest problems in cleaning up hazardous waste sites.

A) liability; degree of purity required

B) appropriate technology; location

C) appropriate technology; liability

D) degree of purity required; appropriate technology

E) location; cost

23) Toxic landfills are frequently located in ________ areas.

A) wilderness

B) urban

C) rural

D) nonpopulated

E) suburban

24) Illegal dumping and storage of hazardous waste

A) continues to threaten public health.

B) has completely stopped since the Superfund Act.

C) has not stopped completely but is rare.

D) has become a problem mainly since the Superfund Act.

E) will always be present because people are not concerned about toxic wastes.

25) Chemical processing is a way of ________ hazardous waste for safe disposal.

A) reducing the volume of

B) neutralizing

C) incinerating

D) filtering and precipitating

E) acidifying

26) Biological treatments of hazardous waste involve ________ hazardous substances.

A) using plants, bacteria or fungi to absorb and detoxify

B) the genetic alteration of species suffering from

C) using microorganisms to disperse

D) special organic chemical processing of

E) None of these are correct.

27) Secure landfills are those that

A) have no groundwater below them.

B) accept no toxic substances.

C) are built like a bathtub with a lid.

D) are sealed entirely with durable plastic.

E) are sealed entirely with concrete.

28) According to the EPA, the US produces ________ tons of solid waste per year.

A) 9 million

B) 70 million

C) 800 million

D) 11 billion

E) 123 billion

29) The major disadvantage of incinerating waste is

A) it costs more than landfilling.

B) it produces significant air pollution.

C) it cannot be done without first sorting the wastes.

D) both it costs more than landfilling and it produces significant air pollution are correct.

E) both it costs more than landfilling and it cannot be done without first sorting the wastes are correct.

30) Brownfields are

A) landfills that have been converted to farmland.

B) contaminated areas in cities that have to be abandoned.

C) facilities that use plants to convert hazardous wastes to less harmful substances.

D) farmland that has been made useless because of improper disposal of toxic waste.

E) abandoned land in cities that are put to use for community gardens or other green space.

31) Secure landfills are usually sealed with gravel.

32) In terms of cost and safety, one of the best ways to manage hazardous waste is to produce less hazardous waste.

33) The US stopped all dumping of municipal refuse into oceans in 1958.

34) A single PVC bottle in a truckload of PET plastic could make the PET useless for recycling.

35) Photodegradable plastics can breakdown in a landfill.

36) Using the heat from a trash incinerator to power nearby facilities is a process known as

A) energy recovery.

B) recycling.

C) massburn.

D) composting.

37) Using bacteria to 'eat' the oil from an oil spill would be an example of

A) energy recovery.

B) bioremediation.

C) phytoremediation.

D) brownfield recovery.

38) Which of the following has the greatest percent recovery through recycling in 2010?

A) yard waste

B) paper and paperboard

C) metals

D) glass

E) plastics

39) Which of the following has the greatest percent recovery through recycling?

A) Auto batteries

B) Aluminum cans

C) Plastic

D) Glass

E) Tires

40) E-waste is a bigger problem in

A) developing countries.

B) developed countries.

C) the United States.

D) Europe.

E) Central America.

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
14
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 14 Solid and Hazardous Waste
Author:
William Cunningham

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