• GooberEar
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    3 days ago

    Would a styrofoam cup actually stay in reasonably good shape for 400 years after being buried?

    Mostly a curiosity thing. I sometimes use styrofoam peanuts in planters for drainage purposes, and after a single growing season, they’ve already started to show signs of degrading. Not that microplastics are a good thing, but it also makes me wonder if they would actually stick around in good condition for 400 years.

    • JcbAzPx@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It would be plastic for a very long time, but the cup wouldn’t likely survive very long. It would get ground down to plastic dust to be ingested within a few years unless it was in a particularly stable area.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      3 days ago

      If it’s actually make out of polystyrene, I’ve read that is supposed to take 500 years like a lot of other plastics.

      Many packing peanuts are biodegradable these days though, so it might not be actual styrofoam (polystyrene + air).

      • ch00f@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Those packing peanuts are made from corn and are basically edible.

        Or if you wet them, they get sticky and you can stick them together to make stuff.

      • GooberEar
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        3 days ago

        I actually did mistakenly use a biodegradable version in my pots once. It was a very long time ago, before I knew they were a thing. And from what I recall, they quickly turned into a putrid mush at the bottom of the pots.

        At least in my experience, and I don’t know how universal it is, the biodegradable ones tend to be tinted a non-white color and have different texture to them.