No. The ashes have less mass. Mass is "lost" through carbon particles that bind with oxygen to form carbon dioxide gas.
In moderation yes.
Charcoal in and of itself isn't fertilizer but an absorption medium. Due to its extremely high surface area, nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus stick to the charcoal and provide an excellent home to soil friendly bacteria and thus essentially turning charcoal into a slow release fertilizer. Inoculate it with fertilizer before applying
Charcoal is a common material.
Animal Charcoal
yes
No - simple ashes contains more than just carbon. It contains other elements from burning wood - such as sap, insect bodies etc. Charcoal is pure carbon - all other 'additives' are burned off during the manufacturing process.
No it can't .
fgyfyyghvn
Ink mixed with ashes and oil. Charcoal was also used.
cremated ashes in his garden wiltshire.
A scattering garden is a place in a cemetery where families can spread the ashes of their loved ones.
No. The ashes have less mass. Mass is "lost" through carbon particles that bind with oxygen to form carbon dioxide gas.
I think it's charcoal. I saw it on tv that they have to cover all the wood with galvanized iron (yero) and let it stay there for 3 days. It said that if there is air, it will fail. It will turn into ashes instead of charcoal.
The ashes are coming! The ashes are coming!
Yes! I do it for my garden and we get nearly a thousand tomatoes! ( but we have a big garden so don't expect that many).
No headstone, he was cremated and his ashes spread in the garden of his daughter's home.