yes, Nuclear fission as used in nuclear power plants produces radioactive waste with long half lives. However, this creates no problems. This wastes are either confined in the spent nuclear fuel (that is stored either in wet storage or in dry storage facilities) or stored as vitrified nuclear waste.
All plants have radioactive waste, especially fossil fuel plants.
Radioactive wastes are stored in mines; in normal condition they have a nonsignificant effect on the nature.
1,000,000 years
In the Lake of Salt Lake.....You can't find them no wherelse..
in the large central vacuole
In the US they're stored on site.
they store it until it becomes less radioactive
There are no nuclear power plants in Colorado. The only source of waste might be from a small teaching or medical isotope reactor, I have no information on this.
It depends upon the type of waste. Urine is stored in the urinary bladder. Solid waste is stored in the large intestine and rectum.
Liquid waste is stored in the bladder (and discharged as urine).
Plants remove waste products through a process called transpiration, where excess water and waste gases are released through openings in their leaves called stomata. Some waste products are also stored in vacuoles within plant cells or broken down and reused through various metabolic processes.
Plants do not need an excretory system because they create a very small amount of nitrogenous waste.
Food is stored in the form of starch in the plant cell's vacuole, while water is stored in the central vacuole to maintain turgor pressure. Waste products can be stored in vacuoles or transported out of the cell through vesicles for excretion.
The kidneys filter waste products from the blood to create urine, which is stored in the bladder until it is excreted from the body. The waste products are then expelled from the body through urination.
it is stored in your bladder.
None. Its stored in your colon.