The most bizarre burial technologies
World civilizations in the past have practiced all kinds of technologies to bury anomalous dead, from embalming under tombs, to drying corpses in the sky for animals to puncture meat, to cremate the body of a deep sea bottom as a house for good fish. Put the body into the universe.
The list below is the 8 most strangely burial 'technologies' compiled by the New Zealand website.
Burial outside (Heavenly burial)
According to Buddhism, the dead body in Tibet must not be buried in the ground, but must be offered to vultures, to help the deceased quickly return to the motherland. Burial rituals were conducted at outdoor locations at a foot of the mountain, presided over by monks. Tibetans want the dead body to have a pure soul and if any flesh left by the bird means a bad omen. After the vulture eat all the meat, the remaining bones are smashed to pieces for the birds to eat.
According to New Zealand , ancient Persian Zoroastria have a similar tradition, a part maintained in India today. The body of the deceased was exposed on top of a high tower, in order to offer a filthy body to the sun god and prey birds. People removed all the remains of the body months later, and buried it in a cellar at the base of the tower.
Mummified grave
There are ethnic groups who want dead bodies to disintegrate quickly, and there are other cultures that want to keep for as long as possible. Marinating grave graves belongs to the second category. Although Egyptian embalming technology is most famous, it is not exclusive to Egypt. Wreck the popularity around the world, from the East to Peru. The embalmed masters always kept their mummification method confidential.
This photo shows a 2100-year-old mummy found in China named Xin Zhui or "Ba Dai" . "Ms. Dai" has existed with time and today researchers can still carry out her autopsy. The wife of a Han dynasty may have died of a heart attack after eating watermelon seeds.
Natural cemetery
Wild forests that are used as "green cemeteries" today are becoming popular in the West when artificial graveyards are "running out" . People buried burials, coffins and corpses buried in various lands such as grasslands and wild forests were buried.
Usually we use gravestones to mark burial sites in cemeteries, but natural cemeteries often use GPS satellite navigation technology to guide unmarked locations for guests. Green cemetery RuheForsten in the picture is a natural forest in Germany.
Burial under the sea
Instead of "taking the citadel" on land, a handful of remains of ash can be made into an artificial coral under the sea. The ash remains when burned, buried in solid concrete graves in shallow waters, where natural corals do not live. These tombs then become " homes " for many species. Americans built artificial corpses in many areas along the east coast.
Liquefied in alkaline solution
Liquefying the body is an environmentally friendly technology, replacing cremation. The corpse is put into a cavity filled with basic gas, strong potassium hydroxide. After heating the compression chamber for 3 hours, all that remains is sterilized ashes and soft bones that can be crushed, then stored in a jar or discarded.
Identify the future
Those who wish after death have a chance to relive in the future can become volunteers at the frozen conservation centers in the US. Scientists will immerse the body, or just the head in a nitrogen solution, hoping to find a way to bring the corpse back to life in some form.
This frozen method founder, Robert Ettinger, recently died and was frozen frozen by his two wives at the nonprofit Frozen Institute in Michigan State, USA. This photo is a working room at Alcor Frozen Preservation Center in Arizona, USA.
Preserving plastic
In 1977, Von Hangens scientist developed a plasticization technique to store corpses for teaching and research purposes. This involves freezing the body and then replacing ice with acetone and continuing with the polymer. The public has argued a lot about the sources of several plasticized bodies, however Von Hagens said that a large number of people volunteered to donate their bodies for this immortal project.
Send the body into the universe
Dead bodies can now access paradise if they are financially capable. The father of Star Trek's sci-fi series, Gene Roddenberry was one of the first people to hire a person who released his remains to the universe in 1997. However, Gene Roddenberry's remains were not there forever. . After the five-year mission around the Earth, that spacecraft brought his ashes back into the atmosphere.
Currently, there is a memorial spacecraft program carried out by Celestis in Texas, the United States continues to send some dead human ashes to space to help 'dead people can fly flying spacecraft around the Earth '. In the future, cosmic burial can become permanent, with plans to send the remains to the Moon and deeper into the universe.
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