FAAE/Late Stage Decomposition of Embalmed Cadavers: Taphonomy from Cementerio Sur de Madrid

Resource added
How to Cite: Mata Tutor, Pilar, Catherine Villoria Rojas, and María Benito Sánchez. 2021. “Late Stage Decomposition of Embalmed Cadavers: Taphonomy from Cementerio Sur De Madrid”. ​Forensic Archaeology, Anthropology and Ecology 2 (1): 49–60. https://doi.org/10.1558/aefs.17953

Full description

Decomposition is a natural process that begins approximately four minutes after death and continues until the body is degraded to simpler biochemical components which are gradually recycled back to the environment. This process is dependent on extrinsic and intrinsic factors. Embalming is a chemical preservation technique that aims to preserve the external appearance of the body in good condition for an indeterminate period. In Spain, there is a lack of experimental studies carried out to analyse the variables that affect decomposition in embalmed bodies, therefore, in accordance with the conclusions reached by previous authors, it is hypothesised that embalmed bodies show quantifiable characteristics during the late stage decomposition which distinguish them from control, unembalmed, cadavers. An anthropological and statistical analysis was performed on 14 individuals from Cementerio Sur de Madrid exhumed after ten years according to the Mortuary Health Law of the Autonomous Region of Madrid. The preliminary results obtained showed that there is a qualitative and statistically significant relationship between the variables evaluated, being the presence or absence of soft tissue the most notable difference. The mortuary or thanatopraxy treatments performed before the burial and the microenvironmental conditions of the burial positively influence the soft tissue preservation on embalmed bodies. These results contribute to the understanding about the decomposition rate of an embalmed cadavers in cemeteries, and the related extrinsic variables.

Download image “FAAE/Late Stage Decomposition of Embalmed Cadavers: Taphonomy from Cementerio Sur de Madrid”
  • type
    Image
  • created on
  • file format
    jpg
  • file size
    34 KB
  • container title
    Archaeological and Environmental Forensic Science
  • creator
    Pilar Mata Tutor; Catherine Villoria Rojas; María Benito Sánchez
  • issn
    2753-6254 (Online)
  • issue
    2.1
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • rights holder
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • doi