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There doesn't seem to be an appropriate thread for this subject, although there are multiple threads where this newly-discovered tendency for corpses to move on their own would be relevant in possibly explaining weirdness.
FULL STORY: https://www.sciencealert.com/the-wr...ses-move-around-quite-a-bit-as-they-decompose
Dead Bodies Keep Moving For More Than a Year After Death, Forensic Scientist Finds
According to new research, the dead may not always rest in peace... quite literally. For more than a year after death, corpses move around "significantly", and this finding could be important for forensic investigations.
Researchers at an Australia-based decomposition research facility - colloquially known as a "body farm" ... - made the startling discovery after using time-lapse cameras to film decomposing corpses.
For 17 months now, a camera at the Australian Facility for Taphonomic Experimental Research (AFTER) has been taking overhead images of a corpse every 30 minutes during daylight hours. And for the entire duration, the corpse continued to move.
"What we found was that the arms were significantly moving, so that arms that started off down beside the body ended up out to the side of the body," medical scientist Alyson Wilson of Central Queensland University told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
Some post-mortem movement was expected in the very early stages of decomposition, she explained, but the fact that it continued for the entire duration of filming was a complete surprise.
"We think the movements relate to the process of decomposition, as the body mummifies and the ligaments dry out," she said.
"This knowledge could be significant in unexplained death investigations."
In fact, it could change how scientists analyse and interpret crime scenes, particularly when human remains have been undiscovered for some time.
Until now, unless there was evidence that a body has been moved - either by animals or people - forensic scientists generally would assume that the position of a discovered body is the position at time of death.
Since Wilson's research is the first use of a time-lapse camera to study human decomposition, this is also the first evidence that the assumption about body position at death may not hold true.
A paper describing the discovery that corpses are rather more lively than expected has yet to be published, but it follows on from previous work, published in Forensic Science International: Synergy.
Wilson and colleagues used a time-lapse camera to track the decomposition of a corpse for six months. The resulting images were compared against a system of allocating points for levels of decomposition across the body to determine the post-mortem interval - how long the person had been dead.
The point system neatly matched the time-lapse photographs, adding to the system's validity as a forensic tool ...
Based on these findings, it appears that if enough corpses are studied with long-term timelapses to generate statistical data on post-mortem movement, that knowledge could be used to analyse crime scenes with greater accuracy in the future. ...
FULL STORY: https://www.sciencealert.com/the-wr...ses-move-around-quite-a-bit-as-they-decompose
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