Should be more of it.
I wonder which birds would learn to dispose of human corpses if the
practice were introduced in Australia. I guess Black Kites in the inland,
but what about coastal areas, it might take a while for suitable predators
to learn of this new food source.
John Leonard
On 16/09/2009 8:46am, Scot Mcphee <> wrote:
WARNING. DO NOT WATCH THIS VIDEO IF YOU ARE SQUEAMISH.
This is a slide show of a Tibetan "Sky Funeral". There is a horde of
hungry vultures that make short work of the body.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxyUqI0cS8s
Another warning. IT IS VERY GRAPHIC and shows an ancient Tibetan
funerary practice. DO NOT WATCH THIS VIDEO IF THE EXTREMELY GRAPHIC
HANDLING OF HUMAN REMAINS CONCERNS YOU. Also the music is terrible;
better to watch it in silence. But fascinating if you can stomach it.
>From wikipedia: "The Tibetan sky-burial practices appear to have
evolved out of practical considerations: a) most of Tibet is above the
tree line, and the scarcity of timber makes cremation economically
unfeasible; b) subsurface interment is equally difficult since the
active layer is not more than a few centimeters deep, with solid rock
or permafrost beneath it. The customs are first recorded in an
indigenous 12th century Buddhist treatise known colloquially as the
Book of the Dead (Bardo Thodol). Tibetan tantricism appears to have
influenced the procedure."
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