Find other sites about
-
I don't want to hear bitching about how this isn't he ultimate solution. This article explains in very clear language how the scientific process can be simple, direct, and practical. Get over it, people. *end rant* From the page: "Getting ordinary plastic bags to rot away... more
Reviewed by umanor May 23 2008, 12:53pm ( 53 reviews ) • therecord.com
-
munchbrother
munchbr...
801 Favs
-
amdpox
amdpox
167 Favs
-
derdogant
derdogant
947 Favs
-
vanoola
vanoola
336 Favs
-
killermouse0
killerm...
440 Favs
-
IamStumblegenius
IamStum...
108 Favs
-
liamvictor
liamvictor
15K Favs
-
thumb
thumb
3,415 Favs
-
gamkiller
gamkiller
3,519 Favs
-
CalumC2
CalumC2
253 Favs
- Showing 43 of 53

- Reviews of the site
-
Join StumbleUpon or login to add a review!
-
Rated by munchbrother on Jul 30 2008, 12:19am
Wow we need more thinking like this
-
Rated by ashoe27 on Jul 20 2008, 6:56pm
A 16 year-old finds a way to degrade plastic bags. Kudos!!
-
Rated by stephenVolacci on Jun 18 2008, 11:27am
Very cool, the potential for waste reduction are great. This study needs more funding, and could have great benefits.
-
Rated by rondol on Jun 17 2008, 11:17am
Sounds like an interesting idea, but it still needs refining
-
Rated by targatop on Jun 02 2008, 11:07am
Andromeda strain?
-
Rated by Blackline101 on May 31 2008, 1:15pm
amazing!
-
Rated by dmcmaken on May 28 2008, 9:29pm
fabulous!! i'm so glad, this restores my faith in humanity.
-
Rated by gentlemancole on May 28 2008, 1:48am
Where does the baking soda and vinegar figure into this?