Tristan Reeveur
Member
- Aug 29, 2019
- 15
If anybody knows, plese answer.
The Wikipedia entry says they do yearly body searches there. Presumably they then go through the standard procedures to identify a body, and then either release it to the family if identified, or the Government buries/cremates it if unidentified. Is that what you wanted to know?
Thank you very much! Not exaсtly. The main question is what are they doing after burning? Is there any cemetery for urns or they simple throw out garbage?
imagine if you CTB the day after a yearly search, and you've got to wait an entire year to be found...The Wikipedia entry says they do yearly body searches there. Presumably they then go through the standard procedures to identify a body, and then either release it to the family if identified, or the Government buries/cremates it if unidentified. Is that what you wanted to know?
imagine if you CTB the day after a yearly search, and you've got to wait an entire year to be found...
99% cremation. Too bad, it could have been a hell of a playground for dogs' walking with bones everywhere.
Not even good at giving back to living creatures when we leave. Humans ...so special !
Are you planning on dying unidentified over there?
imagine if you CTB the day after a yearly search, and you've got to wait an entire year to be found...
99% cremation. Too bad, it could have been a hell of a playground for dogs' walking with bones everywhere.
Not even good at giving back to living creatures when we leave. Humans ...so special !
99% cremation. Too bad, it could have been a hell of a playground for dogs' walking with bones everywhere.
Yes, it is.Is that the place the berk from YouTube went while wearing a silly hat? I forget his name, some non-entity that fought another guy in a celeb boxing match, Joe Welland? Something like that.
Logan Paul?Is that the place the berk from YouTube went while wearing a silly hat? I forget his name, some non-entity that fought another guy in a celeb boxing match, Joe Welland? Something like that.
There's not much evidence of it iirc, simply because it wouldn't leave much archaeological evidence. However, in Neolithic long barrows, inhumations we're usually disarticulated, and stored in specific places in the tomb. So, all the long bones in one part, skulls in another, children in another, etc.Ahh but cremation gives back space for other living creatures to do their thing in.
I admire the Tibetan sky burial tradition. I gather ancient Britons did something similar. @Underscore my sweet, can you help me?
Some evidence at Stonehenge from Mike Parker Pearson's groundbreaking excavations. Detailed towards the end. Note, however, that it's just one interpretation of the evidence.There's not much evidence of it iirc, simply because it wouldn't leave much archaeological evidence. However, in Neolithic long barrows, inhumations we're usually disarticulated, and stored in specific places in the tomb. So, all the long bones in one part, skulls in another, children in another, etc.
The monuments were open throughout their use and only sealed when they went out of use in the later period. It is thought that the bones were taken out of the tomb at specific times and used in ancestor rituals in society. If that was true, then the bodies would have to be defleshed before disarticulation and I can't think of a better way than sky burial.
I may look into it some more and see if I can find some actual evidence for ancient British sky burials.
There are no animals in Aokigahara.....