This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-42324932
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
'Monster' fatberg to go on display in museum | 'Monster' fatberg to go on display in museum |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Part of one of the capital's biggest fatbergs is going to be put on display in the Museum of London next year. | Part of one of the capital's biggest fatbergs is going to be put on display in the Museum of London next year. |
It is a slice of a monster fatberg, over 250m (820ft) long, which had been clogging up sewers below Whitechapel. | It is a slice of a monster fatberg, over 250m (820ft) long, which had been clogging up sewers below Whitechapel. |
The museum says it was a congealed concoction of "fat, oil, grease, wet wipes and sanitary products". | The museum says it was a congealed concoction of "fat, oil, grease, wet wipes and sanitary products". |
The display will show how modern living and high levels of rubbish are putting pressure on the "arteries" of London's Victorian infrastructure. | The display will show how modern living and high levels of rubbish are putting pressure on the "arteries" of London's Victorian infrastructure. |
The Whitechapel fatberg became something of a celebrity in its own right last autumn - with Thames Water fighting a nine-week battle against a "rock hard" blockage weighing 130 tonnes. | The Whitechapel fatberg became something of a celebrity in its own right last autumn - with Thames Water fighting a nine-week battle against a "rock hard" blockage weighing 130 tonnes. |
The museum describes the fatberg's dimensions as being longer than Tower Bridge and as heavy as 11 double-decker buses. | The museum describes the fatberg's dimensions as being longer than Tower Bridge and as heavy as 11 double-decker buses. |
Curator Vyki Sparkes said it "will be one of the most fascinating and disgusting objects we have ever had on display". | Curator Vyki Sparkes said it "will be one of the most fascinating and disgusting objects we have ever had on display". |
Thames Water's Stuart White says that part of its fascination is that it is the product of our own modern-day living, describing it as "repulsively human". | Thames Water's Stuart White says that part of its fascination is that it is the product of our own modern-day living, describing it as "repulsively human". |
There is an eco-friendly ending to what happened to the rest of the fatberg. | There is an eco-friendly ending to what happened to the rest of the fatberg. |
It was chopped up and mostly converted into bio-diesel. | It was chopped up and mostly converted into bio-diesel. |
Reality check: What is a fatberg? | |
Despite the name, fatbergs are actually mainly made up of wet wipes. They account for a startling 93% of the material blocking our sewers according to Water UK, the membership body for water providers. | |
They collected samples to analyse from blockages in sewers, pumps and wastewater treatment works. | |
Wet wipes - mostly baby wipes, but also those used to remove make up and clean surfaces - made up the vast majority of the material. | |
Fat, oil and grease only made up 0.5%. | |
The other 7% was made up of a range of other materials including feminine hygiene products, cotton pads and plastic wrappers. | |
Toilet paper made up just 0.01% of the material blocking our pipes and sewers. | |
Environmental charities including Greenpeace and the Marine Conservation Society say they are not surprised by this high number since wet wipes are often marketed as "flushable". |