Grizzly Bear
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- Joined
- May 30, 2008
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And it decomposes when it is exposed to sufficient temperatures, but high temperatures aren't the only mechanism. There are also many challenges with disposing of the wallboard once it's no longer being used. I gave you links some time ago, but you were so busy thinking of your next red herring that you ignored them not once, but twice.Hogwash. There is no president or scientific evidence that sulfur from wallboard can be freed in a high temperature environment. They use wallboard for fireproofing!
Source
Traditionally, the waste, regardless of its source has been disposed of either in landfills or through incinerators.
However, there are a number of problems with these forms of disposal. The moist anaerobic conditions of landfills allow bacteria to reduce the sulfate component of gypsum to hydrogen sulfide gas, carbon dioxide, and water. Hydrogen sulfide gas at low concentrations is noxious, and at higher concentrations can be dangerous.