Poster's note : lightweight, but contains some info that was new to me.
There are links in the main text which may give more depth.

http://grist.org/news/could-this-rock-save-the-planet/

Meet olivine, a greenish rock that is basically the Clark Kent of the
mineral world: It may look boring, but it has a secret superpower.
Specifically, it can pull CO2 from the air and sequester it — nothing to
sniff at when facing down the supervillain of our age: anthropogenic
climate change.

Retired geochemist Olaf Schuiling has spent decades advocating for using
the abundant mineral as a solution to our climate change woes — by
carpeting as many surfaces as possible in the stuff, from playgrounds to
roads to beaches, we could allegedly remove enough carbon from the
atmosphere to slow the rate of climate change. According to one analysis,
one ton of olivine can dispose of approximately two-thirds of a ton of CO2
— impressive, but that’s still a LOT of rock when we’re talking billions of
tons of CO2 a year.“

Let the earth help us to save the earth,” Schuiling says, which makes for a
catchy quip, but may not count as a scientific endorsement; Schuiling’s
skeptics point out that the olivine cure would take 20 years to start
making a difference, and likely account for a slew of new emissions from
mining and distributing tons of rock over the surface of the planet.
Schuiling rejoins:

Industry extracts and transports huge quantities of coal, oil and gas, he
notes, so if society decided that geoengineering was necessary, why
couldn’t it do the same with olivine? The annual amount needed, equivalent
to about 3,000 Hoover Dams, is available around the world and is within the
limits of modern large-scale mining. “It is not something unimaginable,”
[Dr. Schuiling] said.

Of course, other geoengineering solutionsmight be easier to implement —
say, spewing clouds of sulphur into the air toimitate volcanic cooling,
or fertilizing the ocean to pull CO2 out of the air with a massive algal
bloom — but they also hold way more potential for disaster. (As in, “Oh you
liked your oceans alive and full of food? Oops.”)

In any case, Schuiling’s proselytizing has caught on in the Netherlands,
where those in the know can spot green-sanded paths and gardens throughout
certain cities. A Dutch company called greenSand (I bet you can guess why)
has sprung up to provide Spanish-mined olivine to enterprising
DIY geoengineers in the Netherlands. And more research is being done about
the efficacy of fighting climate change with sandboxes:At the Royal
Netherlands Institute for Sea Research in Yerseke, on an arm of the North
Sea, Francesc Montserrat, an ecologist, is investigating the idea of
spreading olivine on the seabed. Not far away in Belgium, researchers at
the University of Antwerp are studying the effects of olivine on crops like
barley and wheat.The National Academy of Sciences is expected to release a
report on geoengineering sometime this year, but I’d bet it will still
include more questions than answers. Meanwhile, the things we know about
climate change — that we caused it, and will continue to do so until we
drastically cut emissions — are pretty straightforward.

I guess all I’m trying to say is that if we really want to address the
problems of human-caused climate change, it might not make the most sense
to start with a magical rock garden.

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