"To be truly radical is to make hope possible,
rather than despair convincing." -Raymond Williams

How To Compost a Corpse

Posted: June 16th, 2009 | Author: James Glave | Filed under: Compost, Death, Zero Waste, top | Tags: , , |

My first piece for The Walrus is up on the magazine’s site. Here’s an excerpt:

Squirrels, it turns out, compost quite nicely. Small birds? Sure. Happens in the woods every day, after all. But stuff a human body into a backyard bin, and within a day or so the neighbours will start to complain.

Susanne Wiigh-Mäsak, a Swedish biologist specializing in soil production, explains: “When you die, you start smelling, because the oxygen does not reach inside the body.” More specifically, an abundance of anaerobic bacteria quickly takes hold in such a large mass of tissue, resulting in the rank gases CSI techs use to sniff out “decomp.” But after a decade spent investigating green options for dealing with dead bodies, Wiigh-Mäsak has finally figured out how to discreetly turn our earthly remains back into, well, earth.

How did she do it? Read “Decomposting Bodies” and find out.


One Comment on “How To Compost a Corpse”

  1. 1 Geoff G. said at 1:11 pm on June 16th, 2009:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWWg5shNWR4


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