Science Human compost funerals 'better for the environment' - FEED THE BUGS PEASANT.

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A US firm has given scientific details of its "human composting" process for environmentally friendly funerals.

A pilot study on deceased volunteers showed that soft tissue broke down safely and completely within 30 days.

The firm, Recompose, claims that its process saves more than a tonne of carbon, compared to cremation or traditional burial.

It says that it will offer the world's first human composting service in Washington state from next February.

Speaking exclusively to BBC News, Recompose's chief executive and founder, Katrina Spade, said that concerns about climate change had been a big factor in so many people expressing interest in the service.

"So far 15,000 people have signed up to our newsletter. And the legislation to allow this in the state received bi-partisan support enabling it to pass the first time it was tabled," she said.

"The project has moved forward so quickly because of the urgency of climate change and the awareness we have to put it right."

Katrina Spade
Image copyrightRECOMPOSEImage captionRecompose boss Katrina Spade says her plan has proved so popular because of climate change
Ms Spade spoke to me as results of the scientific study into the composting process, which Recompose calls natural organic reduction, was being presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Seattle.

"There is a loving practicability to it," she said, in one of the few interviews she has given since announcing details of the project a year ago.

She told me that she came up with the idea 13 years ago when she began to ponder her own mortality - at the ripe old age of 30!

"When I die, this planet, which has protected and supported me my whole life, shouldn't I give back what I have left?

"It is just logical and also beautiful."

Ms Spade draws a distinction between decomposing and recomposing. The former is what happens when a body is above ground. Recomposing involves integrating it with the soil.

She claims that natural organic reduction of a body prevents 1.4 tonnes of carbon being released into the atmosphere, compared with cremation. And she believes there is a similar saving compared to traditional burial when transportation and the construction of the casket is taken into account.

"For a lot of folks it resonates with the way they try to lead their lives. They want to pick a death care plan that resonates with the way they live."

The process involves laying the body in a closed vessel with woodchips, alfalfa and straw grass. The body is slowly rotated to allow microbes to break it down.

An artist vision of a future Recompose facility shows circular vessels in a honeycomb structure in a garden
Image copyrightRECOMPOSE/MOLT STUDIOSImage captionAn artist's vision of a future human composting facility
Thirty days later the remains are available to relatives to scatter on plants or a tree.

Although the process is straightforward, it has taken four years of scientific research to perfect the technique. Ms Spade asked soil scientist Prof Lynne Carpenter Boggs to undertake the work.

Composting livestock is a well-established practice in Washington state. Prof Carpenter Boggs's task was to adapt it for human subjects and ensure that the remains were environmentally safe.

She carried out pilot studies with six volunteers who had given their enthusiastic consent to the research prior to their deaths. She told me that the work took an emotional toll on her and her team.

"We all kept checking in on each other. My physiology felt different, I wasn't sleeping well for a few nights, I wasn't hungry - it was a distress response."

Prof Carpenter-Boggs found that the recomposing body reached temperatures of 55C (131F) for a period of time.

"We are certain that there has been a destruction of the vast majority of [disease-causing organisms] and pharmaceuticals because of the high temperatures that we reached."

Recompose will begin business later this year. Anyone can participate but the process is legal only in Washington state. Legislation to allow natural organic reduction is currently being considered in Colorado. Ms Spade believes that it will be a matter of time before it is more widely available - in the US and elsewhere.

"We hope other states will pick up the idea once we get going in Washington. We have had lots of excitement from the UK and other parts of the world and we hope to open branches overseas when we can."

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Dying contributes to climate change now.

Just blow my body up with some kind of hilarious weaponry.
 
When I was planning my own body disposal, I was shocked to learn that by law in the state of California you can NOT be buried in a plain old pine box without embalming. The CHEAPEST casket the funeral home offered was a whopping $1000. And it was still a fancy piece of shit with cloth lining and everything. Embalming is mandatory too IIRC.

I don't believe in cremation for personal reasons, but the cost of burial is just nuts, by fucking law they can not just dig a hole and throw you in because bad for environment reeeee, you have to buy a non-decomposing coffin and embalming and etc. Of course there's lots of money being made from this shit.

And of course it's backed up by a bullshit reading of the Book of Revelation about how bodies need to be preserved because of the rising of the dead and shit. Fuck, I'm not a millenarian (believer in Revelation bullshit) dumbshit, but I still have to get the full Christian burial even though I don't want it. Just toss my body in the fucking river and be done with it, ffs.

According to funeral consumers alliance, in California, you only have to be embalmed if your body is on a plane or train, headed for another state.

When is embalming required?
Embalming is rarely required by law. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission and many state regulators require that funeral directors inform consumers that embalming is not required except in certain special cases. Embalming is mandated when a body crosses state lines from Alabama and Alaska. Five other states—California, Idaho, Kansas, Minnesota and New Jersey—require embalming when the body leaves those states by common carrier (airplane or train).

 
I don't give a damn what happens to my body when I die. Just toss me down the canal and then go to the pub for a drink or three.
 
Upon my death, I would like my corpse to be utilized for either scientific research, ballistics tests, or just thrown in a dumpster.

It's not like I'll be using it anyway.
 
As someone who is a heathen hippie this doesn’t bother me too bad. I believe I owe the earth something and it’s welcome to my dead body :).

However, I also would like the tradition of my Viking ancestors to be upheld. I would like for my skull to be defleshed and scrimshawed so that I may forever be a tacky nicknack on a descendant's mantel.

edit:because spelling
 
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It's your death, why not go all out and have some fun with it?

Fun things to do with your remains when you are dead.

1: Have your flesh stripped and used for tanning/decoration, will require prior acknowledgement pre autopsy
2: Have your fat removed and used for candles/wax, will require prior acknowledgement pre autopsy
3: Have your remains cremated and mixed in paint/ink/oils so that you will become art. Does not require any acknowledgment, just will statement
4: Have your corpse interred in polymer and then in wax, and subsequently have said wax coffin carved to be in likeness of you (requires pre mortem acknowledgement with parties involved)
5:Have your skull removed and used for decoration (Requires pre autopsy acknowledgment)
6: Inter your corpse at the base of a fruit bearing tree, so that future generations will eat "You" fruit. (Lemons for a chuckle) (Requires pre mortem acknowledgement with parties involved)
7: Taxidermy your corpse, that's right! Taxidermy your own corpse! Be the life (and death) of any halloween party by getting stuffed. (Requires pre mortem acknowledgement with parties involved)
8: Inter your corpse into a necropolis/catacomb/Hungarian Cathedral. Who says you have to be alone in death? (Requires pre mortem acknowledgement)
9: Inter your corpse into a peat bog and become a bog mummy. (Requires minor acknowledgement)
10: Be one last fuck you to your enemies! Glitter bomb your corpse! Have your ashes mixed with glitter and then mail yourself to your enemy. What are they going to do? You're already dead! (Warning, will get the person who sent the package on your end liable for legal and health matters)
Can't tell if you've played Graveyard Keeper or not, as most of these are playable choices.
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That's cool and all, but what about lead/mercury tooth fillings and doxorubicin-like drug leeching into the soil and killing shit? Don't Creutzfeld-Jacob's disease proteins survive decomposition? Human carcasses are fucking disgusting with the toxins and diseases they carry, why feed that shit to animals or even trees?
 
Burn my body, use my ashes as a pozzolanic additive for a concrete foundation. My carbon footprint shall be both significant and long-lasting

plus I'll get to haunt whoever lives there maybe
 
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