A 3,775-year-old log found in Canada had barely lost any of its carbon content since being buried, indicating "wood vaulting" is a viable means of carbon storage.
This didn’t happen to the ancient Eastern red cedar log, however, because it was buried more thean six feet deep into a layer ...
A new study, analyzing a 3,375-year-old log that remained remarkable preserved in clay soil, found that the old piece of ...
An ancient log buried for nearly four millennia is providing scientists with critical insights into how nature can preserve ...
A new University of Maryland-led study found that burying wood in the right environmental conditions can stop its ...
A very old log dug up in 2013 in Quebec, Canada, might help lead to ways to tackle climate change.
A 3,775-year-old log discovery has lent credence to the idea of burying wood to sequester the carbon it contains. Known as a ...
In 2013, while conducting a wood vaulting pilot project in Quebec, Canada, Zeng discovered the 3,775-year-old log that became ...
Figuring out ways of locking carbon out of the atmosphere, such as by burying wood, is key to stalling the worst consequences ...
Burying wood can store carbon for thousands of years, according to an analysis of an ancient log unearthed in Canada.
In 2013, while conducting a wood vaulting pilot project in Quebec, Canada, Zeng discovered the 3,775-year-old log that became the focus of the Science study—a chance encounter that for Zeng felt ...
In 2013, while conducting a wood vaulting pilot project in Quebec, Canada, Zeng discovered the 3,775-year-old log that became the focus of the Science study -- a chance encounter that for Zeng ...