Burying Dead Trees

Burying Dead Trees after a Wildfire

Earth and Leaf Editorial – Burying Dead Trees

The science actually indicates, leave them alone.  Cutting them down and burying dead trees is unnecessary, will disturb the soil releasing CO2.  Cutting then down and burning them is idiocy.


Burying Dead Trees
Charred trees still standing after a wildfire in Glacier National Park, Montana – Gorski/NurPhoto/Shutters​tock

Will burying dead trees after a wildfire keep their carbon locked up?

 

Partially burnt trees still standing after a wildfire are typically felled and burned, but a US start-up claims burying them instead will trap the carbon underground for centuries.

In 2021, a smouldering underground coal seam ignited the tinder-dry grass and brush in Poverty Flats, Montana, setting off a wildfire that burned 267 square kilometres. The blaze killed 50,000 trees, mostly ponderosa pines, that had shaded cattle grazing on the Gentry Ranch.

 

Links to Other Relevant Stories and Sites


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Acknowledgement 

Earth and Leaf would like to acknowledge the great work done by the many journalists, scientists, photographers and contributing organisations that we showcase in the Document Library.  We always credit these contributors and properly reference their work, writing and research.  We could not make this project so effective without their hard work and dedication.

Categories: Climate Change
Tags: Wildfires
Author: Alec Luhn, Gorski, Nurphoto, Shutterstock
Burying Dead Trees

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