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Soon your dead body will be dissolved or frozen to dust

By | September 25, 2012, 3:02 PM PDT

One could say Yarden is king of death mountain - in the Netherlands at least. The company runs 41 funeral centres, 22 crematoria, and is asking future-forward industry questions.

Yarden commissioned a peer-reviewed report (PDF) from TNO last year comparing the environmental impact of corpse disposal methods. It turns out, traditional methods have the worst environmental impact by far.

Suenedha Sood of Co.Exist reports:

TNO found that burial was by far the most environmentally damaging, as it takes up land space, causes the release of the greenhouse gas methane, and potentially leaks embalming chemicals into the soil and air. Cremation was the second most environmentally harmful method, since it causes the release of carbon dioxide emissions–the practice accounts for about .02% of the world’s CO2 emissions, at 6.8 million metric tons per year.

The first commercially available alternative to burial and cremation is a mix of potassium hydroxide and hot water. Dissolving the corpse, called “resumption”, is the first of two environmental friendly ways to “return dust to dust” - in this case, returning it to liquid.

The second is “cryomation”, an old-school Mr. Freeze method. Liquid nitrogen is used to freeze the body into a brittle mess. And in this case, we really do return to dust.

Resomation Ltd, the Scottish company offering service in the U.S., markets the method as a new kind of cremation. Family members of the deceased do receive ash - only it is the ground-up bones that remain after resomation.

With an abundance of customers a sure bet, it is good to know the corpse disposal industry is considering the lasting impact of our contemporary death rituals.

It would be tragic to see our beautiful graveyards go, and it is strange to imagine a time when graveyards would actually be a relic of the past.

Then again, if you saw the size of my New York apartment, well, that’s tragic too.

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Rachel James

About Rachel James

Rachel James is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Rachel James

Rachel James

Contributing Editor

Rachel James is a radio documentary producer and multimedia journalist based in Brooklyn, New York. She has worked with Radiolab and This American Life, contributed to WNYC's Talk To Me, Down East Magazine, KALW's Crosscurrents and the Third Coast International Audio Festival. She holds a degree from the University of Toronto and is a graduate of the radio program at the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies.

Follow her on Twitter.

Rachel James

Rachel James

Rachel does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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12
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0 Votes
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what about....
...thermal depolymerization, and turning corpses into diesel, essentially, such as being done near the Butterball Turkey plant in Carthage, Mo.?
Posted by Paul Wick
26th Sep
+5 Votes
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cemetaries
The article says "burial was by far the most environmentally damaging, as it takes up land space." I have always been grateful for cemetaries in an urban enviroment. If they weren't there the land would probably have been developed and paved over. RIP.
Posted by mastman01
Updated - 26th Sep
0 Votes
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Good point!
+1
Posted by AlanLaRue
26th Sep
0 Votes
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Yes but
It's open space, but it's not as good as having a public park
Posted by theotherwill
26th Sep
0 Votes
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and when you are dust
consider having your remains mixed with concrete to make these cones, which are used to stabalize coastlines. You can protect your country even after you are gone this way.http://www.netl.doe.gov/kmd/cds/disk23/E-Regulatory%20Streamlining/General%5C92002%5CMT92002-11%20Final%20%2009-95%20.pdf
I proposed this as a possible business venture but never could get it going. Feel free
Posted by Sarah Jumel
26th Sep
+1 Vote
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WSasteful
G'morning, join me for coffee? Nah, return them back to the soil in a sterile, useable condition to help replenish the materials they took out of the earth's soil while living. Recycle baby !


Don Jose de La Mancha
Posted by Don Jose de La Mancha
26th Sep
+2 Votes
+ -
Environmentally friendly?
Uh, huh. Like disposal of highly caustic potassium hydroxide bio-goo is not an environmental problem. And cryomation? What happens when the "dust" thaws to room temperature and is exposed to moisture? Yeah, that's right, more bio-goo. Resomation? You get the bone dust, but what about... the bio-goo?

Get a window seat on your next cross country flight. Look at all that empty land in fly over country. No room for burials? Yeah, right. Try again, Rachel.
Posted by tthor
26th Sep
0 Votes
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Traceable bodies
1. How portable are these methods?
2. How fast can you turn a body into goo/dust?
3. What DNA signature, if any, is left?

So what do we suppose will happen next when a body can be "disappeared" without a trace in an hour or two? Sounds like great material for a movie plot ... only it won't be a movie.
Posted by ClearCreek
26th Sep
0 Votes
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Old idea
Tours of San Simeon aka Hearst Castle begin at an ancient Roman ceramic container that was used for dissolving corpses in acid.
Posted by theotherwill
26th Sep
+1 Vote
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all burials are not the same
We've been discussing an offer from relatives to be dumped in a hole in their Missouri farmland--wooden box optional, no prep other than being dead. Burial does not require perpetual care. Maybe I would make good fertilizer. I don't know, but I'll bet corn would still grow.
Posted by tfranke
26th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Tree farm cemeteries
A tree for each body buried. Choose your tree and inscribe your soul on it. Life moves on within.
Posted by jyanzikong
26th Sep
+1 Vote
+ -
Supplement
Of course! Soylent Green.
Posted by 16Tons
27th Sep
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