AOL: Can I be buried in my yard? Cremation and burial aren’t the only options.
Can I be buried in my yard? Cremation and burial aren’t the only options.
The Washington Post: Comparing green funeral options, from composting to natural burial to water cremation
Comparing green funeral options, from composting to natural burial to water cremation
Cremation is growing in the United States and outpacing the rate of burial according to the National Funeral Directors Association. There are more options than traditional caskets and cremations.
The Monterey County Herald: Liza Horvath, Senior Advocate: New options for burial, cremation
But you have many options when choosing a permanent resting place, like ground burial, interment in a crypt, natural burial, or burial at sea. With all those options come many questions.
A generation ago, burial was the default and cremation the exception. Today, the roles are rapidly reversing. By 2035, 80% of Americans will opt for cremation over burial, according to the National ...
Cremation has overtaken burial as the most common funeral choice in the U.S., with a 55.8% national rate in 2026, driven largely by cost savings. National averages show direct cremation at $1,834 ...
Duluth News Tribune: Bio-cremation is an alternative to burial or fire-based cremation
Bio-cremation, also known as chemical cremation, aquamation or resomation, is a relatively new alternative to burial and fire-based cremation. It requires less energy and fewer natural resources than ...
Cremation outpaced traditional burial in the U.S. for the first time in 2015. Here, a cremation urn is shown. When Robert Boetticher, Jr., was in mortuary school in the 1980s, his teachers barely ...