Cremating remains through a process involving water for a more sustainable option is now approved in Montgomery County, Maryland.
A Dutch start-up has created a biodegradable "living coffin" made of a fungus, instead of wood, which it says can convert a decomposing human body into key nutrients for plants.
With the rise of renewable energy and electric vehicles, hydrogen-powered vehicles have attracted growing interest. Prof. Molly Mengjung Li, Assistant Professor of the Department of Applied Physics at ...
For decades, cremation has been on the rise as the preferred method of disposition in the United States. As many embrace more ...
Venus has long been called a dry, hellish planet veiled in clouds of liquid acid. But new study of old spacecraft data tells ...
Abstract: In densely rotated built-up areas, restricted by interactive and complex scatterings, most polarimetric synthetic aperture radar scattering analyses and unsupervised building detection ...
The skull discovered on Saturday and the leg found back in July are reportedly both human, but the additional remains require ...
UNDATED (WKRC/KIMT/CBS Newspath) - Funeral directors are offering water cremation as a new option, although it's not legal in every state. Natural water cremation, also known as alkaline hydrolysis, ...
The study by SLU, Uppsala University, and Lund University found that rewetting drained boreal peatlands significantly ...
Abstract: Electrolysis, a clean and efficient method, utilizes renewable alternating current (AC) for water decomposition into hydrogen. This study addresses power quality improvement in rectifiers ...
Réseau sur le Stockage Electrochimique de l’Energie (RS2E), CNRS FR 3459, 33 rue Saint Leu, 80039 Amiens Cedex, France ...