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Subject:
From:
Mitch Allen <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Mitch Allen <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 12 Aug 2011 08:51:33 -0700
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Bill Rathje has done a lot more work on solid waste management than appears in that popular book, including writing a monthly column for a large magazine for the industry. I would look further into his work and try to reach him at U Arizona. 

 
Mitch Allen, Publisher
Left Coast Press, Inc.
1630 N. Main Street, #400
Walnut Creek, California 94596
925.935.3380 phone 925.935.2916 fax
[log in to unmask]
www.LCoastPress.com


>________________________________
>From: Todd Hanson <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Sent: Friday, August 12, 2011 8:36 AM
>Subject: Talkin' Trash
>
>Greetings,
>
>I'd like the group's thoughts on a small dilemma I'm having. I'm investigating a series of Cold War era (early 1960s) missile ballistic missile sites in New Mexico. To date, our site investigations have found no ground evidence of trash dumps and the site plans make no references to such. Likewise, the site histories also make no reference to trash collection services. So, where did the trash go? Obviously, if we could locate any site local dumps it could be a gold mine of data. Now given the specific site, I realize that no one may had the have exact answer, but I do have a couple general questions that the group may be able to shed some light upon.
>
>First, is anyone aware of any semi-seminal works on the history of solid waste management in the United States? I've found Lanier Hickman's American Alchemy: The History of Solid Waste Management in the United States, but it focuses mostly on urban efforts and the rise of recycling, and Rathje and  Murphy's Rubbish! The Archaeology of Garbage to be insightful, but not completely. The site I'm working is really rural and annexed to a small New Mexico town.
>
>Now I'm actually old enough to actually remember a time when trash collection in rural areas did not exist and I'm sure it varied from town to town with the enactment of federal waste management laws in the mid-1960s, but I've not yet found anything that really documents this paradigm shift from home or local dumps to municipal waste processing as it relates to archaeology. Maybe such a single historical work (or works) simply doesn't exist? But maybe others have pondered this dilemma before?
>
>The second question is aimed at those of you who may have some 20th Century military experience or at least more experience than I with the archaeology of US military sites. How is trash generally handled in the military? Did bases normally (in my case Walker Air Force base) have their own trash collection services? Perhaps they incinerated what they could and sent the rest to a dump? The trash had to go somewhere.
>
>Obviously, much more archive and library work on this topic is in my future, but any thoughts you folks might have on this will be most welcome.
>
>Thanks,
>
>Todd Hanson
>-- Todd A. Hanson, Ph.D.
>Los Alamos National Laboratory
>Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545
>[log in to unmask]
>
>
>

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