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  2. What Animal Is Digging Holes In Your Yard ? Experts Share How ...

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    It’s annoying to discover unsightly holes, mounds, or tunnels in your lawn or garden beds. But figuring out what’s excavating without your permission isn’t straightforward. “There’s some ...

  3. Fill dirt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fill_dirt

    Fill dirt (also called cleanfill, or just fill) is earthy material which is used to fill in a depression or hole in the ground or create mounds or otherwise artificially change the grade or elevation of real property. [1]

  4. Looking Out: The mystery of the yard holes

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  5. Watch where you step! These bees may be digging holes in your ...

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  6. Hügelkultur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hügelkultur

    Hügelkultur bed prior to being covered with soil. Hügelkultur is a German word meaning mound culture or hill culture. [3] Though the technique is alleged to have been practiced in German and Eastern European societies for hundreds of years, [1] [4] the term was first published in a 1962 German gardening booklet by Herrman Andrä. [5]

  7. Warren (burrow) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_(burrow)

    A modern view of a medieval pillow mound at Stoke Poges, England. The most characteristic structure of the "cony-garth" ("rabbit-yard") [1] is the pillow mound.These were "pillow-like", oblong mounds with flat tops, frequently described as being "cigar-shaped", and sometimes arranged like the letter E or into more extensive, interconnected rows.

  8. Nutria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutria

    The nutria (/ ˈ n juː t r i ə /) or coypu (/ ˈ k ɔɪ p uː /) (Myocastor coypus) [1] [2] is a herbivorous, [3] semiaquatic rodent from South America.Classified for a long time as the only member of the family Myocastoridae, [4] Myocastor has since been included within Echimyidae, the family of the spiny rats.

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