The discovery of a nearly 4,000-year-old piece of wood suggests that helping to reduce carbon in our atmosphere may be a simple matter of burying items to slow down decomposition.

As detailed by ThePrint, the journey began in 2013, when researchers found a log of eastern red cedar covered in clay soil and 6 feet underground in Saint-Pie, Quebec. After the team let the log dry for nine years, carbon dating revealed it was 3,775 years old.

“The wood was carbon-14 dated to be 3775 ± 35 years old, providing direct evidence for the viability of wood burial as an approach for carbon removal and durable storage,” the study [said](https://theprint.in/en…

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