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#11
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11-24-2021, 08:28 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:7745 Join Date: Nov 2012 Posts: 24 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 3 Post(s)
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Re: Embalmers' Good Work Revealed Years Later (part4)
Yes, those tubes were mentioned in one report on the Hardin, MO recovery operation. Apparently, the local funeral home had not been in any habit of filling out those ID forms that are put in those tubes...where remains were found, ID was attempted based on items found with the deceased, known pathology (ie dental charts, hip replacements etc) and in some cases, a visual ID could still be made....in at least one case, a visual ID was still easily possible by surviving family for a man who had died in Dec, 1937! The body was still in essentially perfect condition. Though in most cases, it was dis-articulated bones or mummified remains at best with those buried more than a relatively short period of time. The flood waters attacked the older sections of the cemetery anyway, with graves mostly dating from roughly 1910-1960 and the newest ones more or less spared. The earliest graves dated to the 1820s, but it was unclear if any tangible remains were present by 1993. |
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#12
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11-24-2021, 09:20 AM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,469 Mentioned: 6 Post(s) Quoted: 4543 Post(s)
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Re: Embalmers' Good Work Revealed Years Later (part4)
Thanks for the info! When I was going to school in California, there were torrential rains for most of a month, and in the flooding, at least a couple of cemeteries collapsed. I remember one that had pictures of caskets spread across a main road. But I never heard any details of how they handled it. Same thing with the big floods in the Midwest a few years ago, where they were blowing dikes to save areas, and letting other areas flood. They reported caskets floating around in the floodwaters. I remember a pic of a rescue boat with a casket pushed up against it. But they never covered any details of those recoveries either.
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#15
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11-28-2021, 01:09 AM
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Re: Embalmers' Good Work Revealed Years Later (part4)
I find exhumation incredibly interesting. To see how a body holds up over a long period of time in the ground is fascinating. The morbid side of me wonders what my Grandmother would look like whom died in 1995, my Aunt who was murdered in 1985 and my friend whom died in a car wreck in 2012. I don't know if I would look if I ever had such an option but my morbid side says I would.
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#17
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11-28-2021, 08:28 AM
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| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:387 Join Date: Nov 2016 Posts: 3,080 Mentioned: 9 Post(s) Quoted: 1583 Post(s)
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Re: Embalmers' Good Work Revealed Years Later (part4)
When you hear the Divine's whisper, that your permission to be here, soon expires; go away with grace. Embrace the hereafter; who knows, It may be better for you there, than here. It's not up to me to decide, thank God. |