BOULDER, CO / ACCESSWIRE / October 1, 2024 / The Natural Funeral, a leader in sustainable funeral practices, proudly announces the launch of its TerraCare Partner Program™. This innovative initiative ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Minnesota has legalized a process that allows people to, quite literally, become soil after they die. The two- to three-month ...
QUILCENE — Auburn-based human composting company Earth Funeral is seeking to make a third option available, as an alternative to cremation or traditional burial. “Human composting, otherwise known as ...
Last week was a difficult milestone for Sean Hanna of Encino. It marked one year since he lost his partner Stephen Staunton to brain cancer. Staunton was an avid gardener. He was also a really big fan ...
There’s a burgeoning industry that offers “terramation.” Just like cremation is a euphemism for body incineration, terramation simply means composting human remains. The big selling point: It’s a ...
ATLANTA — A new law signed by Gov. Brian Kemp last week will make Georgia the next state in the nation to allow human composting — an eco-friendly alternative to traditional burial and cremation.
Kristoffer Hughes has spent 32 years working with the dead. And he thinks we've been doing it all wrong. Treated as a “problem to be solved”, bodies are embalmed with formaldehyde to preserve their ...
TACOMA, WA / ACCESSWIRE / January 24, 2024 / The first-ever TerraCon terramation (body composting) conference is set to take place from Feb. 21-22, 2024, at the Tacoma Convention Center, just 30 miles ...
KEENE, N.Y. (WCAX) - The number of people looking for environmentally friendly burials is on the rise. With recent legalization allowing human composting in New York, people there now have a handful ...
Minnesota has legalized a process that allows people to, quite literally, become soil after they die. The two- to three-month process transforms the human body into soil "so that our last act on the ...
Minnesota has legalized a process that allows people to, quite literally, become soil after they die. It's called terramation – also human composting or, more formally, natural organic reduction – and ...