User:Bheggs001/sandbox

Green funerals reduce your carbon footprint and contribute to the natural eco-cycle, help to protect lands with recreational, cultural, and spiritual significance, and can even restore wildlife and native plant habitat.

Many green caskets are made by companies that have been fair trade-certified, which ensures that the people making the caskets are employed in safe environments and receive a fair wage for their work.

"Green caskets are easily biodegradable, don’t add toxins to the earth as they decompose, and are often produced in a way that's carbon-neutral. Commercially produced caskets, on the other hand, can take an extraordinarily long time to break down in the soil, especially if the casket contains any metal parts, such as handles and hinges. Most commercially produced caskets have chemical treatments, such as paint or veneer, which seep into the soil as the casket breaks down."

"Natural burial, or green burial, presents the most ecologically friendly way to lay a loved one to rest. You preserve not only their memories but also the natural habitat in a manner that no traditional funeral can attempt to match."

During her time in Africa starting in 1960 Jane Goodall influenced the start of seven different field sights that scientists were studying the actions and lifestyles of chimpanzees in Africa. In the year 1986 she helped organize a conference in America of all the scientists studying in Africa so they can discuss how chimp behavior is the same or different in different areas.

Interesting concept to edit. Your work seems thorough Mbern016 (talk) 14:10, 22 April 2021 (UTC)