Andrew et al,

Thanks for the link. In the piece, Dr. Manning is calling for, or pointing 
out the benefits of adding calcium to the urban soil...which is found in 
olivine. Below is a pdf worked up by Dr. Manning.

Update on progress: Urban Carbon Capture project  Prof David Manning 
<http://research.ncl.ac.uk/engscc/ucc/assets/UCC%20Presentation%20Summaries%20ncl.pdf>

"Urban Carbon Capture has national significance and we are working on 
collecting data from a number
of sites around the north east to further investigate the processes 
involved (SECURE Project)

• We now have increasingly robust data concerning the rate at which soil 
carbon capture occurs
• All the evidence that we have gathered shows that the carbon capture 
process works, and is a
normal and natural consequence of urban redevelopment".

The SECURE Project <https://www.secure-project.org/> website offers more on 
this subject.

Michael
  
<http://research.ncl.ac.uk/engscc/ucc/assets/UCC%20Presentation%20Summaries%20ncl.pdf>

On Sunday, January 18, 2015 at 11:32:00 AM UTC-8, andrewjlockley wrote:
>
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04xrwhc
>
> Carbon sequestration in overgrown building rubble was covered in BBC 
> "inside science" on Radio 4 this week. It's available on iPlayer and the 
> segment starts at 20 mins in.  If anyone has the journal reference for 
> this, let me know. 
>
> There's also a good piece on permafrost, just prior, in the same show. 
>

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