Local governments can cut costs, reduce emissions and build resilience by treating excavated soil as a resource.
Somewhere under a patch of ordinary garden soil, billions of bacteria are quietly going about their business eating organic matter, releasing electrons, and in doing so, producing a faint but constant ...
It's 2053 and for the third day in a row the water has been turned off across the south of England. You turn on the radio to ...
Overall, with good soil moisture, farmers could plant a forage cover crop species from July 10 to Aug. 10, with grazing ...
The Garden Magazine on MSN
The best type of soil for your houseplants to thrive
Most people think keeping a houseplant alive is mostly about light and watering schedules. Those things matter, obviously.
The Garden Magazine on MSN
Why hydrangeas suddenly change color and what it reveals about your soil
A gardener plants a hydrangea expecting one shade and gets another the following summer. Sometimes the same shrub carries ...
The Garden Magazine on MSN
Why This Household Spice Belongs in Your Soil, Not Your Kitchen Cabinet
Most people know cinnamon as the thing that makes oatmeal worth eating or gives autumn baking its particular warmth. It sits ...
Experiencing hair fall? While biotin supplements are widely marketed, experts suggest they're not a universal fix. True ...
It’s 2053 and for the third day in a row the water has been turned off across the south of England. You turn on the radio to ...
Amid the peatlands of northern Sweden, billions of microbes are quietly rewriting their genetic playbooks—and doing so far more often than scientists realized.
These natural materials form a biofilter that may dramatically cut the methane, nitrous oxide, and water pollution generated ...
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