[1] Looking like fugitives from a factory floor, at least 1,000 55-gallon drums dotted Central Park in the 1980s, marring what may be the greatest invented landscape in [4] America. They were big — not to mention unsightly — but not big enough to contain all the cans, bottles, cups, napkins, newspapers, magazines, paper bags, pizza boxes, hot-dog [7] wrappers and other refuse from 12 million visitors a year. Trash piled up in them and around them. To help keep up with the overflowing cans, rear-loading garbage trucks lumbered [10] back and forth like dinosaurs across lawns and meadows, hills and valleys, paths and walkways. It was a brutish way to treat what was supposed to be a green gem. No wonder the park felt
[13] out of control.
Today, Central Park is a far different place. The number of visitors has soared to 42 million visitors annually. [16] They generate 2,000 tons of trash and 58 tons of recyclables a year. Despite all that garbage, it is possible to drive around the sprawling park and count the pieces of stray litter on two [19] hands. In place of 55-gallon drums and 68-gallon plastic bins are neat arrays of handsome, patented, coated-aluminum receptacles with 32-gallon plastic bags inside. The cans are [22] colored black for garbage, gray for bottles and cans, and green for paper and cardboard. Instead of being serviced by ungainly rear-loaders, the receptacles are emptied day and night by [25] workers scooting around in 86 small carts. They take the bags to one of eight pickup areas in the 843-acre park, from which the bags are hauled to transfer stations in the Bronx and [28] Queens.
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Judge the following item about the ideas and the meaning of the previous text.
According to the text, parks in Bronx and Queens use the same garbage collection system as in Central Park.