Analysis of Sanitary Landfills and Alternatives
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Hood College Biology
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Human Sciences
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Abstract
The first step in establishing a sanitary landfill is
site selection. This selection process must find a site
where solid waste disposal can be accomplished economically,
where disruption of the environment is minimized, which is
acceptable to the public, and which satisfies the local,
State, and Federal rules and regulations. Each site
examined will have different characteristics which suggest
an appropriate landfill design. The site design also
establishes goals, identifies design basis, prepare
alternative designs, and select the best site.
Waste quantities and composition will vary with each
community. A waste survey taken during site design will
give valuable information in determining the amounts of
residential, commercial, and industrial wastes. Another
consideration is seasonal variations in both composition and
quantity.
Methane gas and leachate composition and control are
the two leading problems in a sanitary landfill. The
amounts and composition of the gas and leachate will be
directly determined by the kind and amounts of wastes
disposed in the landfill. The leachate must be treated and
disposed of either through a sewage treatment plant or
through evaporation. The methane gas must be vented either
into the atmosphere or today many old landfills are being
taped and the gas is being sold or used as a fuel on site.
No matter whether there is one hundred percent burial
or recycling, there must be land disposal. There are local,
State, and Federal rules and regulations governing the
methods and procedures for this land disposal of solid
waste. LandEill operations use these rules and regulations
to protect the environment, to be a good neighbor to nearby
communities, and to be economically sound.
When selecting, designing, and operating a landfill, it
is important to have an end use in mind. This will foster
more efficient site operation and may prove to be useful in
gaining local support for the sanitary landfill.
Although solid waste generation is an inevitable fact
of life, it is also apparent that there are choices
regarding the types and quantities of residuals that we
produce and the manner in which we deal with them
thereafter. This choice of non-disposal alternatives for
solid waste is called resource recovery. Even though many
of the technologies are in their early stages of
development, they are viable and necessary ways to reduce
volume. This reduction in turn prolongs the life of our
sanitary landfills.
