Greener Ways to the Great Beyond
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COURTESY FINAL PASSAGES
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Here's how to ensure your final resting place is earth
friendly and priced right.
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By Nancy Smith
A typical, no-frills funeral and burial in the United
States costs from $6,000 to $10,000, uses formaldehyde in
embalming, nondegradable steel caskets and concrete vaults
placed shoulder to shoulder in established cemeteries.
Burial in a green or natural cemetery, on the other hand,
can cost half as touch, and embalming mortal caskets and
concrete burial vault's are prohibited. Instead,
biodegradable caskets, usually made of wood or cardboard,
or burial shrouds of natural fibers are used. Green
cemetery graves are placed randomly throughout a woodland
or meadow, and marked only in natural ways, with the
planting of a tree or shrub, or the placement of a flat
indigenous stone, which may or may not be engraved. Burial
locations are mapped with a GIS (geographic information
system), so future generations can locate an ancestors
final resting place.
There are more than 200 green cemetery its in Great
Britain, and the idea is beginning to catch on here in
North America. Lisa Carlson is executive, director of the
Funeral Consumers Alliance in South Burlington, Vermont,
and author of Caring for the Dead, which
tackles the topic of funeral law state by state. She
reports embalming, expensive caskets anti concrete vaults
are: not required by law in any state. Bodies can be kept
cool until burial rather than being embalmed and cemeteries
require vaults only to prevent soil settling and facilitate
grass mowing.
The leader in the emerging green-cemetery business in this
country, Carlson says, are Dr. Billy and Kimberley Campbell
of Memorial Ecosystems, founded in 1996 in Westminster
South Carolina. Their idea is to Use green cemeteries to
preserve open space. You can be buried at the Campbells
first green cemetery, Ramsey Creek Preserve, in
Westminster, and visitors can walk on trails through 32
acres of mixed Woodlands and open fields there.
In Florida, a green cemetery called Glendale Memorial
Preserve is being established to save a 350-acre family
farm from development. And groups in several other states,
inducting Colorado, California, New York, Washington and
Wisconsin, have efforts under way to established green
cemeteries that center on land preservation. In Canada, the
Memorial Society of British Columbia also has a formally
funded green-burial initiative under way.
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