Liquid cremation also known as alkaline hydrolysis or resomation, is a
 process that reduces the body into soft bone remains and liquified 
tissue in a matter of hours. The body is first place  into a porous metal basket that allows fluid to exchange throughout the cycle.  The basket is slid on rails into the chamber where a mixture of water and alkali are automatically added to the 
vessel.   Gas-powered steam generators build up pressure within the chamber as the temperature rises to around 170 degrees Celsius. All the body's tissue, muscle, hair and nails  dissolve, as the re-circulation 
pump creates a whirlpool effect. An hour into the process the body has disappeared and only calcium phosphate outlines of the bones remain.   The calcium 
phosphate is very soft and can be crushed in the hand.   This wet, soft 
and soapy bone residue must be dried(under a heat lamp) 
before it can be pulverized. The calcium phosphate is great fertilizer, 
and can be spread in throughout your garden, making this an eco-friendly way to dispose of a body. 
Only certain clothing fibres will dissolve during the process though; cotton will not dissolve, thous silk and wool will. After the process fillings can be found as well as any metal implants. Also remaining are many litres of a liquid containing building blocks the corpse was made from: amino acids, peptides, sugar and mild soap.   The  
liquefied tissue and chemicals are pre-treated with additional chemicals
 to balance the PH before it is flushed out of the resomation chamber into 
the local sewer system. The body has been reduced to a coffee-colored liquid with the consistency of motor oil and a strong ammonia smell,  flushed into the sewer system. And 
to calcium phosphate that can be spread over the ground. 
 
That works so clean and neat.
ReplyDelete