Like it or not, you will die someday.
While various belief
systems offer explanations for the metaphysical experiences that follow,
what happens to your physical body after death is all just a matter of
science – and, largely, it’s not pretty.
A video from AsapScience explains the processes that occur from the moment of death to the final stages of decomposition.
While
various belief systems offer explanations for the metaphysical
experiences that follow death, what happens to your physical body is a
matter of science. A video from AsapScience explains the processes that
occur from the moment of death to the final stages of decomposition
The news isn’t all bad, however; eventually, you just might end up among the flowers.
Science and medicine have
found ways to prolong the imminence of death, but it’s still an
inevitable end for every living being.
Around the world, roughly 100 people die every minute.
Through simplified cartoons, the video explains what happens starting at the first few seconds after the body dies.
The first few hours
In the initial seconds after death, oxygen is quickly depleted and brain activity surges.
The neurons then cease
operations, and the brain stops giving off hormones which regulate the
different functions of the body, though some may carry on for a few
minutes.
The remaining stores of ATP, which provides the energy for life, is used up, and the muscles relax.
This includes the sphincters (so there’s a strong possibility you will poop or pee yourself).
Dead bodies have gained notoriety for their pale complexion, especially visible in light skinned people.
This is the result of lack of blood flow, and becomes apparent 15-20 minutes after death.
The heart is no longer
pumping and thus blood is not circulating, so gravity drags it down
toward the ground, causing blood to pool at the lowest point of the
body.
After a few hours, the body experiences red and purple discolouration from the settling blood.
By 12 hours after death, the body has reached maximum discolouration.
This process, known as ‘livor mortis’ helps coroners and forensic investigators determine the approximate time of death.
During this time, another process has also begun.
In the three to six hours after death, a phenomenon known as ‘rigor mortis’ begins to set in.
Cellular organelles
deteriorate from the lack of energy, and leak calcium into muscle cells,
which binds to protein and causes muscles to contract.
The muscles become stiff, leaving the body stuck in position for the next 24-48 hours.
The days following death
While these other
processes are occurring, the body (if it hasn’t been chemically embalmed
or otherwise preserved) has slowly been undergoing decomposition the
entire time.
Cells in the body accumulate without proper blood flow, causing a rise in carbon dioxide gas, and a rise in the pH of tissues.
This weakens the cell membrane and they burst, spewing cytosol.
Cytosol contains proteins
and enzymes, which breaks down the surrounding tissue, along with the
help of more than 100 trillion microorganisms.
Then, the anaerobic
bacteria (that which doesn’t need oxygen to survive) in the
gastrointestinal tract eats through the abdominal organs.
This is a smelly process,
known as putrefaction, and the foul odours released by the breakdown of
amino acids attracts insects including mites, carrion beetles, and
blowflies.
Blowflies then lay eggs in the rotting tissue, which hatch within a day.
The larvae – maggots – then eat the tissue until they mature.

Putrefaction produces foul odours, released by the breakdown of amino
acids which attracts insects including mites, carrion beetles (pictured
right), and blowflies. Blowflies then lay eggs in the rotting tissue,
which hatch within a day. The larvae, maggots, pictured left, then eat
the tissue until they mature
Between
20-50 days after death, butyric fermentation takes place and attracts
beetle larvae, protozoa, and fungi. This is known as dry decay, and can
occur over the course of a year. Carrion beetles, pictured above, are
used to remove flesh from bones during a skeleton preparation at the
Natural History Museum in Vienna
The first few weeks
Maggots can consume 60
percent of the body’s tissue in just a few weeks, and the resulting
holes release decomposition fluid and gas.
Between 20-50 days after death, butyric fermentation takes place and attracts beetle larvae, protozoa, and fungi.
This is known as dry decay, and can occur over the course of a year.
A year and beyond
Whatever remaining parts of the body are eaten away by plants and animals over the subsequent years, even the skeletal remains.
If the body is left entirely at the mercy of the elements, every aspect of the body will be broken down.
Then, the molecules are recycled in nature.
Whatever
remaining parts of the body are eaten away by plants and animals over
the subsequent years, even the skeletal remains. If the body is left
entirely at the mercy of the elements, every aspect of the body will be
broken down. Then, the molecules are recycled in nature
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WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU'RE ABOUT TO DIE (SLASHER FILM STYLE)
In a Halloween themed video
by the American Chemical Society last year, scientists explained
exactly how your brain’s chemistry changes just before you’re killed by
an axe murderer.
First, you’ll feel an intense sense of fear, which is an evolutionary response that gets you ready to react or run away.
The fear that results is
thought to be controlled by a cluster of neurons that form the PVT, or
paraventricular nucleus of something known as the thalamus.
Fear will startle you into
reacting, which is when the fight or flight response is triggered which
causes your adrenal glands to start pumping out adrenaline.
This raises your heart
rate, sharpens senses and provides access to huge amounts of energy in
order to cope with threats to survival.
At times, the threat is so intense it can cause a 'freeze' response.
This could be interpreted
as the brain being overwhelmed, or it may have evolved as a way of
keeping still to hide from predators.
If you do manage to get away from the axe murderer, you’ll probably start screaming.
Screams are mostly instinctive, and used to cause others to be fearful and react.
If the axe murderer catches up with you, you will likely feel severe pain.
When you’re injured, neurons called nociceptors send messages up to the brain.
Those are collected by the thalamus, which in tries to tell the brain to do whatever it can to stop the injury happening again.
But your brain keeps
working. According to recent studies, the brain appears to undergo a
final surge which can be associated with consciousness.
Then comes biological death.
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A MACABRE HISTORICAL TRADITION
In footage from KQED,
the animals preserved in the ‘library of life’ at the Museum of
Vertebrate Zoology at UC Berkeley undergo a careful preservation
process.
After the skin has been removed and samples collected, the bone needs to be cleaned of flesh.
At the museum, researchers
have found a way to speed up the decomposition process using something
more accurate than human hands: flesh-eating beetles.
These beetles can be seen
swarming the carcasses of snakes, owls, and other animals sent to the
museum, eating any flesh remaining until nothing is left but the bone.
The practice is both morbid and efficient, and has been in use for many years.
The museum first established its colony of flesh-eating Dermestid beetles in 1924.
At the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at UC
Berkeley, flesh-eating beetles are a common and effective tool to
preserve rare species. Here, the beetles strip a snake to the bone
Almost 100 years later,
the direct descendants of the colony still work to clean museum
specimens of the last traces of life before they are preserved in the
halls of the library.
Dermestid beetles are both fast and precise in their work.
A week after death, the
beetles will lay eggs in the flesh of a corpse, and the fast-growing
larvae, which will outgrow their skins six to eight times in a matter of
days, soon emerge and consume all that remains.
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