NOT JUST BURIAL OR CREMATION
How will genealogist record "burials" in a few decades?
How about:
Freezed in Roodepoort or
Exposed to the Elements in the Kruger Game Reserve or
Orbiting Earth or
Converted into a Diamond.
How about:
Freezed in Roodepoort or
Exposed to the Elements in the Kruger Game Reserve or
Orbiting Earth or
Converted into a Diamond.
These are just a few possibilities mentioned in an article published on 8 July 2009 on Health24
A shortened version of the article follows below.
"When pondering the fate of our mortal remains, most of us weigh up the pros and cons of the two standard methods: burial or cremation. But if either of these strike you as too dull and uncreative a way to bow out, maybe you’d like to mull over some of the more exotic choices available to the modern human corpse.
Should any of the following strike your fancy, you might need to also make arrangements to have your remains exported, because most of these procedures aren’t yet available in South Africa.
- The deep freeze
- The big chill
Once your deceased body reaches the cryonics facility, circulation and breathing are artificially restored, the body is cooled, and then the blood is replaced with preserving solutions. Oxygen is continuously circulated to (ostensibly) prevent brain damage. In an attempt to retain memory, the brain is infused with chemicals that prevent ice crystal formation during the cooling process (at -196 °C)
- Plastination: strike a pose
The process involves draining all liquids from dissected parts of the body, and replacing the fluid with polymer. Unique gases and heat are then applied to the parts, hardening and ‘fixing’ the tissue.
Plastination’s proponents point out that the final product is clean, odourless and permanent. It's an excellent way to educate students, because the tissues possess interactive visibility. Many universities are opting for plastination over formaldehyde-preserved cadavers.
- Feed the birds
Environmentally, this is a clean, efficient method – or was until the vulture population in India started to decline in recent years, forcing authorities to seek additional ways to dispose of remains.
- Go boldly
On launch day “families gather at the liftoff site to share the experience of seeing the loved one's dream of space flight realized. With a roar and a fiery streak across the sky, the rocket lifts its precious load higher and higher into the peaceful solitude of space.”
This will cost you anything from a paltry $995 to have one gram of your remains sent into the earth’s orbit, to $12 500 to get as far as the moon or deep space.
- Sleep with the fishes
The idea is that marine creatures, under pressure from the destruction of coral reefs, can then use you as a new home. This concept does in fact have scientific legitimacy: similar structures are being used in an attempt to rehabilitate reefs in different parts of the world.
- Shine on
This will set you back anything from US$2 699 to US$19 999 for a loose stone. Setting is extra. The service is also available for dearly departed pets.
- Get plastered
(Olivia Rose-Innes, EnviroHealth Expert, and Matthew Louw, Health24, updated June 2009) Source material: Eternal Reefs: official website Gunther von Hagens Bodyworlds: official website LifeGem: official website Lonely Planet Tibet (2005); Lonely Planet Publications; 6th edition Promessa Organic AB: official website Space Services: official website
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