- News
- Using North Carolina’s Peat Bogs to Help Fight Climate Change
News
Using North Carolina’s Peat Bogs to Help Fight Climate Change
Curtis Richardson, director of the Duke University Wetland Center at the Nicholas School of the Environment, has been studying pocosin in eastern North Carolina for decades. These wetlands of sandy soils and peat are heavy hitters when it comes to carbon storage – taking carbon out of the atmosphere and storing it underground.
Rewetting coastal peatlands that were once drained to create farmland could help remove significant amounts of global
Related
May 20, 2026Show Us How You Spend Your Duke Time Off in Summer 2026
Your time off has a story. Show us how it looks. This summer, what you do away from work can do more than recharge you. It can inspire your colleagues and even win you something in return. Whether you stay close to home or head somewhere far, share h...
May 19, 2026Forbes Names Duke Among 'Best Employers for New Grads' in 2026
Duke University and Duke Health appear again on list for workplaces that support early career professionals...
May 18, 2026What Changed After the Cover Story That Never Ran
In Working@Duke’s 20th anniversary year, Rachel Meyer Gallagher revisits anxiety, growth and the seasons that followed ‘the issue that never printed’ due to the pandemic...