Waste Recycling in the Food Chain

Man's emergence as a successful and resourceful member of the earth's community is largely due to his ability to manipulate and utilize other members of the community to his own advantage. However varied his other preoccupations may have been, obtaining food for survival was his constant...

詳細記述

保存先:
書誌詳細
第一著者: Omole, T. A.
フォーマット: Lecture
言語:英語
出版事項: University of Ife Press 2013
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3582
タグ: タグ追加
タグなし, このレコードへの初めてのタグを付けませんか!
_version_ 1810764568364843008
author Omole, T. A.
author_facet Omole, T. A.
author_sort Omole, T. A.
collection DSpace
description Man's emergence as a successful and resourceful member of the earth's community is largely due to his ability to manipulate and utilize other members of the community to his own advantage. However varied his other preoccupations may have been, obtaining food for survival was his constant concern. It still is. For thousands of years, man was a wandering food gathering animal. Hunger was often his lot and insecurity and uncertainty were his constant companions. His role in the natural scheme of things was that of a consumer, a confirmed omnivore and often that of a scavenger. Aristotle was correct in asserting that procreation and feeding are the main pre-occupations of all living beings. Like the lower animal, whom in many aspects he resembled, early man collected fruits, mosses and tubers, seized eagerly upon such small animals as snakes and lizards and even ate the insects that crawled beneath his feet. In these early days, man reflected nature; he was indeed a part of nature to a greater extent than at the present time. Yesterday he was full, today empty. In sunshine he was merry, in storm wretched and afraid. Life bore a terrible immediacy for him, with little thought of future and none of the past. In the childhood of human race, the mind of man was fixed on the present.
format Lecture
id oai:ir.oauife.edu.ng:123456789-3582
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher University of Ife Press
record_format dspace
spelling oai:ir.oauife.edu.ng:123456789-35822023-05-13T11:13:28Z Waste Recycling in the Food Chain Omole, T. A. Waste Industrial waste Urban waste Agricultural waste Food chain Waste utilization Uses of wastes Manure Fibrous waste Waste as animal feed Cocoa waste Cassava peel Fibrous residue of vegetables Brewery wastes Sawdust Animal excreta Man's emergence as a successful and resourceful member of the earth's community is largely due to his ability to manipulate and utilize other members of the community to his own advantage. However varied his other preoccupations may have been, obtaining food for survival was his constant concern. It still is. For thousands of years, man was a wandering food gathering animal. Hunger was often his lot and insecurity and uncertainty were his constant companions. His role in the natural scheme of things was that of a consumer, a confirmed omnivore and often that of a scavenger. Aristotle was correct in asserting that procreation and feeding are the main pre-occupations of all living beings. Like the lower animal, whom in many aspects he resembled, early man collected fruits, mosses and tubers, seized eagerly upon such small animals as snakes and lizards and even ate the insects that crawled beneath his feet. In these early days, man reflected nature; he was indeed a part of nature to a greater extent than at the present time. Yesterday he was full, today empty. In sunshine he was merry, in storm wretched and afraid. Life bore a terrible immediacy for him, with little thought of future and none of the past. In the childhood of human race, the mind of man was fixed on the present. 2013-02-16T18:45:26Z 2018-10-29T11:40:03Z 2013-02-16T18:45:26Z 2018-10-29T11:40:03Z 1983-01-18 Lecture http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3582 en pdf application/pdf Nigeria University of Ife Press
spellingShingle Waste
Industrial waste
Urban waste
Agricultural waste
Food chain
Waste utilization
Uses of wastes
Manure
Fibrous waste
Waste as animal feed
Cocoa waste
Cassava peel
Fibrous residue of vegetables
Brewery wastes
Sawdust
Animal excreta
Omole, T. A.
Waste Recycling in the Food Chain
title Waste Recycling in the Food Chain
title_full Waste Recycling in the Food Chain
title_fullStr Waste Recycling in the Food Chain
title_full_unstemmed Waste Recycling in the Food Chain
title_short Waste Recycling in the Food Chain
title_sort waste recycling in the food chain
topic Waste
Industrial waste
Urban waste
Agricultural waste
Food chain
Waste utilization
Uses of wastes
Manure
Fibrous waste
Waste as animal feed
Cocoa waste
Cassava peel
Fibrous residue of vegetables
Brewery wastes
Sawdust
Animal excreta
url http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3582
work_keys_str_mv AT omoleta wasterecyclinginthefoodchain