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A Project to Turn Corpses Into Compost
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K
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14 Apr ’15 - 10:09 pm
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I'm not quite sure about this, with that being said, I want to become an apple tree, honeycrisp preferably

Cullowhee, N.C. — The body of the tiny 78-year-old woman, gray hair falling over stiffened shoulders, was brought to a hillside at Western Carolina University still clad in a blue hospital gown and chartreuse socks.

She was laid on a bed of wood chips, and then more were heaped atop her. If all goes as hoped, the body will turn into compost.

It is a startling next step in the natural burial movement. Even as more people opt for interment in simple shrouds or biodegradable caskets, urban cemeteries continue to fill up. For the environmentally conscious, cremation is a problematic option, as the process releases greenhouse gases.

Armed with a prestigious environmental fellowship, Katrina Spade, a 37-year-old Seattle resident with a degree in architecture, has proposed an alternative: a facility for human composting.

The idea is attracting interest from environmental advocates and scientists. The woman laid to rest in wood chips is a first step in testing how it would work.

“Composting makes people think of banana peels and coffee grounds,” Ms. Spade said. But “our bodies have nutrients. What if we could grow new life after we’ve died?”

more http://www.nytimes.c.....mpost.html

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ashleigh11
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14 Apr ’15 - 11:54 pm
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Decomposition of corpses releases plenty of methane, which is a greenhouse gas.  I guess it might be interesting to someone to sit down and compare the carbon footprint of putrefication (plenty of methane) vs. cremation (burning of fossil fuel, but the body becomes carbon, water, and CO2) but I can't believe this is going to save the world.  We've got to do SOMETHING! (throws hands up in the air)

BTW, there is a place that already composts bodies for science.  

http://fac.utk.edu/

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15 Apr ’15 - 7:34 pm
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I saw a doc piece on the field once, disturbing and interesting at the same time

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ashleigh11
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16 Apr ’15 - 12:34 pm
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I spent a few weeks down there.  Michigan State was looking into having one here to complement their forensic anthropology department.  The forensic pathologist I worked for is pretty ambitious and was spearheading the project, but the funding never happened.  

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simthefarmer
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16 Apr ’15 - 1:48 pm
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16 Apr ’15 - 3:30 pm
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simthefarmer said
They list one in maine:

http://mainegreencemetery.com/

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