Posted on 09/17/2019 2:23:07 PM PDT by Red Badger
Scientists at a human body farm watched a dead body dance while it decomposed. For 17 months.
Scientists in Australia have allegedly captured video evidence of post-mortem movement in a decomposing body.
Researchers suggest in an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that contracting ligaments may be responsible for the arm movement.
Body donation facilitiesor body farmsprovide forensic scientists with an unrivaled opportunity to study the decomposition of human remains in natural environments.
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Our bodies undergo strange changes after we die. But this may be the strangest: Scientists say they've captured footage of a decomposing body moving in its grave.
Forensic science student Alyson Wilson and her colleagues filmed the decomposition of a donor body for 30-minute intervals over the course of 17 months at the Australian Facility for Taphonomic Experimental Research (AFTER) in New South Wales.
"What we found was that the arms were significantly moving, so that arms that started off down beside the body ended up out to the side of the body," Wilson told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). "One arm went out and then came back in to nearly touching the side of the body again."
Wilson believes the movement could have occurred as ligaments contracted throughout the decomposition process. Researchers have previously documented that rafts of maggots and curious critters can contribute to post-mortem movement.
"Fly and beetle larvae are quite active during certain stages of decomposition and can move smaller parts of the body," forensic taphonomist Shari Forbes of the International Centre for Comparative Criminology, who ran the AFTER lab from 2016 to 2018, tells Popular Mechanics.
Early on, it gets rigor mortis and is very stiff, and then it relaxes, forensic anthropologist Lori Baker of Baylor University tells Popular Mechanics. "You also have bloating that occurs as gases from the intestines are no longer contained and decomposition begins. This, she suggests, could also contribute to movement in a decomposing body.
Its important to note that this latest research has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal, and the finer details of the study have not yet been released. Previous work Wilson published in the journal Forensic Science International: Synergy also focused on the use of time-lapse photography to analyze body decomposition. Popular Mechanics has reached out to the authors for comment and will update the story as needed.
I dont think it would be the first time it has been captured on film as the human decomposition facilities in the USA have been filming their research for years and would have likely observed something similar, Forbes says. But this information certainly helps investigators to better understand the positioning of decomposed remains at crime scenes.
Body donation facilitiesor body farms, as theyre colloquially calledplay an important role in helping forensic scientists understand how the human body evolves after death in a variety of different climatic and soil conditions and at different altitudes.
The first body farm in the U.S., run by the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, opened in 1981. California University of Pennsylvanias body farm in the southwestern part of the state helps scientists better understand decomposition in hot, humid regions. A body donation facility near Colorado Mesa University, which sits just under 5,000 feet above sea level near Grand Junction, helps researchers study decomposition in an arid environment.
"It's so environment-specific," Richard L. Jantz, Professor Emeritus and Director of the Forensic Anthropology Center at the University of Tennessee tells The Atlantic. Bodies take longer to decompose in cold weather rather than hot, humid, and sunny environments. Other environmental factors also play a role, per The Atlantic; remains laid on the surface or buried in moist, acidic soils are susceptible to faster rates of decomposition.
These facilities help scientists understand the myriad of changes our bodies undergo after we die. Immediately after death, the body cools and stiffens, while circulating blood begins to pool at the bottom of the cadaver. Decomposition on a microscopic level occurs quickly, as the bodys cells break down.
Then things get goopy as microbes, like bacteria and fungi and protozoa, begin to break down tissue through a process called putrefaction. Bloating occurs, and finally, as the corpse enters the final stages of decomposition, flesh deteriorates and bones become exposed.
Based on these latest findings, we definitely need more research to understand how our bodies cope with decomposition after we die.
Were they corpse-men, corpse-women, or corpse-people?
Was a movie along time ago, “Coma”
Yech!! Glad I’m opting for cremation. If I’m destined to leave a mess, better to get it over with quickly.
When I first read this story some hours ago, my first thought was of properly buried bodies. Imagine my relief in learning these were corpses left out on “body farms” for research. Movement after death in those circumstances would be natural given the weathers affect on uncovered bodies.
Scientist are now beginning to think you are still alive hours after you are clinically dead.
When they cut up organ donors the bodies are strapped down and given anesthetic because the body twitches and struggles. 100% true.
It would suck to find out you could feel the scappal and saw hours after you died.
IOW, the bodies don’t move but rather bacteria and various critters move it around.
Yeah I think they remade it too.
Random bloke: So Alyson, what do you do for a living?
Alyson: I film decomposing bodies and then study the findings
Random bloke: Excuse me while I go to the loo
Many funeral home workers opt for cremation rather than “properly buried”. Even bodies in hermetically sealed coffins turn to goo.
Well, if you'd like to know more, I highly recommend that you check out the funniest, most charming female mortician here:
Ask a Mortician (videos on all subjects relating to death)
I love her sense of humor and helpful expertise.
They found arms had moved. They found legs had moved. They even found one body had swapped places with another. It was all a mystery until Bobby the Intern confessed.
“Once when some Israelites were burying a man, they spied a band of these raiders. So they hastily threw the corpse into the tomb of Elisha and fled. But as soon as the body touched Elishas bones, the dead man revived and jumped to his feet!”
2 Kings 13:21
Many funeral home workers opt for cremation rather than properly buried. Even bodies in hermetically sealed coffins turn to goo.
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I’ve told this story before. When my father in law died, he had pre-arranged everything. Including his casket. Made things easy for us.
But the funeral home director wanted to upsell. No problem. That’s what they should do. Try and sell a more expensive casket. We just said “No thanks.” But he went on...
“You should really consider this better casket. It has a Lifetime Guarantee!”
I just smiled and said; “WHOSE LIFETIME?? As you see here, Mr. (Redacted) is dead. He HAS no lifetime. Do you mean MY lifetime? Do you think I’m ever gonna wanna find out in say 10-20 years if the casket is still in one piece? That I’m gonna dig him up and check on things?”
My wife was glaring at me at this point. I got in another dig and dropped it.
I believe in putting the fun in funerals.
There’s an old movie, titled Motel Hell, that your comment reminded me of. They captured humans, cut their tongues out, buried them up to their necks in a garden, fed them a special diet and harvested them and added the meat as an ingredient in a food product. Kind of like what the Democrats desire to implement to combat climate change.
Are we living in a demented time, or what? But, then again, there’s nothing new under the sun.
“Scientist are now”
Climate scientists?
Once the brain is deprived of oxygen, you’re out. So say absolute max of two minutes for any form of consciousness.
But many electrical signals originate from the spine, not the brain. These are reflexes. They respond to not so gently prodding like bone saws and scalpels or that little rubber hammer the doctor taps your knee with in order to check your spine.
Anesthesia can suppress reflexes though.
I’m on the fence. I have titanium innards that I expect would be sold for scrap profit after cremation. A local funeral parlor assured me, after laughing at my concern, that if I so stipulated, my actual remains would be returned to a family member of my choice. My phone call with an amused urn saleswoman didn’t mollify me.
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