This may be a new method of burial in the future

A Danish biologist has proposed an interesting burial settlement model without cremation or burial (burial).

Normally, when a person dies, one is traditional burial (burial), and the other is to be cremated (cremated). The only thing worth pondering, is that both forms ultimately return this form to the motherland. Buried to wait for decomposition (for a long time), and to cremate it, bring the ashes back to the land (quickly), but bury it more or less, and cremate it, and consume a lot of firewood .

Picture 1 of This may be a new method of burial in the future
Once the liquid nitrogen is covered, the body will instantly turn into ice and become very brittle.

But the Danish biologist Susanne Wiigh-Mäsak proposed an interesting pattern of burial settlement.

At first, the body was placed in a cooling basin down to -18 ° C and put into a cheap wooden coffin, because the coffin is not really here. Next, the coffin was put through a compartment by the chain to retrieve it, and the body moved to the metal floor so that the liquid nitrogen system sprayed all over the body. Once the liquid nitrogen is covered, the body will instantly turn into ice and become very brittle.

Next, a mechanical system will vibrate for 60 seconds with a 5cm amplitude for the body, which has now turned into very brittle ice, which breaks down into small pieces and is transferred into the vacuum tank to be recovered. country. At this stage, the 'body' was only dried debris in the size of 2 - 4 mm, passed through another tank to separate the metal components such as nail-screws into the bones where the people who have suffered a fracture, and especially mercury fillings that are very toxic, do not spread to the soil environment.

Finally, the whole body is only 30% of its original mass, put into a 1m2 box made of cornstarch buried 30 - 50 cm from the ground. Just 6-12 months will all turn into a new nutrient-rich soil. And what's more interesting is that above will be planted to take advantage of nutrients from this "new soil".

Sweden is currently selected to test this model before disseminating it to the whole world.