Difference between revisions of "Funeral"

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The environmental situation on [[Mars]] does not allow a buried corpse to decompose. To avoid an infinite growth of the number of tombs we need a different kind of '''Funeral'''.
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The environmental situation on [[Mars]] does not allow a buried corpse to decompose. Lack of [[microbes]] on the martian surface means that decomposition of organic material (i.e. dead bodies) is not possible. To avoid an exponential growth of number of tombs, a different kind of '''funeral''' will be required.
  
==How the Swedish do==
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==How the Swedish do it==
 
Dead bodies are freeze-dried with liquid [[nitrogen]], then powdered by a vibration mechanism and finally buried on the cemetery, not too far beneth the surface. The roots of plants grow into the powder and bring the substances of the powder into the circles of eternity. This funeral technology has an ethical  aspect: If the grandchild asks "Where has my grandma gone?" you can tell him "She has turned into a beautiful rose...".
 
Dead bodies are freeze-dried with liquid [[nitrogen]], then powdered by a vibration mechanism and finally buried on the cemetery, not too far beneth the surface. The roots of plants grow into the powder and bring the substances of the powder into the circles of eternity. This funeral technology has an ethical  aspect: If the grandchild asks "Where has my grandma gone?" you can tell him "She has turned into a beautiful rose...".
  
==How do do on Mars?==
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===Can it be done on Mars?===
The funeral can be very similar like the Swedish do. The powder may be buried in parts of the [[greenhouse]]s.
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The funeral can be very similar to the Swedish method. The frozen powder may be buried in parts of [[greenhouse]]s to act as a [[fetilizer]], aiding growth of plants. ''Would settlers be happy with eating vegetables grown from the remnants of their dead crewmates?'' -- [[User:Ioneill|Ioneill]] 04:56, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 20:56, 23 November 2007

The environmental situation on Mars does not allow a buried corpse to decompose. Lack of microbes on the martian surface means that decomposition of organic material (i.e. dead bodies) is not possible. To avoid an exponential growth of number of tombs, a different kind of funeral will be required.

How the Swedish do it

Dead bodies are freeze-dried with liquid nitrogen, then powdered by a vibration mechanism and finally buried on the cemetery, not too far beneth the surface. The roots of plants grow into the powder and bring the substances of the powder into the circles of eternity. This funeral technology has an ethical aspect: If the grandchild asks "Where has my grandma gone?" you can tell him "She has turned into a beautiful rose...".

Can it be done on Mars?

The funeral can be very similar to the Swedish method. The frozen powder may be buried in parts of greenhouses to act as a fetilizer, aiding growth of plants. Would settlers be happy with eating vegetables grown from the remnants of their dead crewmates? -- Ioneill 04:56, 24 November 2007 (UTC)

External Links