Posted on 01/10/2014 1:52:43 PM PST by The Sons of Liberty
Doing some recaps. All this chatter about protocols and what the rescuers should have done. Recent images show her in the water stretched out taut and LONG. You know what that indicates?
RIGOR MORTIS! She’s as stiff as a board.
I think the rescue crew might have noticed, and moved on.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3110483/posts?page=728#728
more fracture of turbine blades here
and at #724
Rigor mortis sets in after a couple hours.
It seems like you’re grasping at any possible straw you can find, and I’m wondering why.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/rigor_mortis.aspx
it’s simply a learning process:
“...Temperature is an important factor in determining the time of onset of rigor. In normal circumstances and at room temperature rigor is complete in about three to six hours. If the temperature is higher the onset is more rapid perhaps no more than an hour in tropical temperatures...”
Have a look at Google Images for drowning victims, nicely laid out straight as a board, some of them.
By the time PJ Ornott got there she supposedly would have been dead in the water maybe 45 minutes. In 79-degree water with her body not producing heat, that would probably be similar to room temperature. So about 3-6 hours. Not likely in 45 minutes.
Of course, if it’s a mannikin it could be stiff as a board immediately, to be passed over as if it had rigor mortis even though rigor mortis was impossible for the actual scenario...
Come now, don’t take it so seriously, I’m just curious, I recall when the nursing home where my mother was in the last few months of life, called me to say come as soon as you can...
She was still alive when they called.
It took LESS than an hour to get there. When my sister and I arrived, she had passed on and when I touched her on the thigh, she was already stiff, which gave me a shock.
It was in March, in a tropical region of Australia. Warm day, not hot.
Jim, you’re a doctor. How long would it take for rigor mortis to set in for a woman floating in a lifejacket in 79-degree water?
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