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Bones, Bugs, and Batesville

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(This is a reprint of an article that appeared in the FAMSA Newsletter, Spring 1999)
by Lisa Carlson
The "Body Farm" it's been called—the brain-child of Dr. William Bass, a forensic anthropologist—and the only location of its kind in the country. Several out-of-town acres owned by the University of Tennessee (UT) in Knoxville have been set aside to study body decomposition and the relevant stages of insect development.

The bodies there have been donated for scientific study, and—for the most part—will end up in the university's collection of skeletons that make up a large database of body-types. With a growing collection, forensic experts are charting the differences between male and female, old and young, black and white, tall and short, heavy and thin. The skeletal studies provide a basis for computer whizzes who can then reconstruct likely features as an aid in identification.

In addition to the skeletal studies, the rate of organ degeneration after death—especially the liver—is being studied. Ultimately, that should allow the time of death to be pinpointed with increasing accuracy.

With the unique and valuable knowledge generated by these forensic studies, UT staff are regularly in demand for training police, medical examiners, and FBI investigators. Some graduates have gone on to work in law enforcement.

I first learned of this center from a Popular Science article sent in by John White of the Hawaii society and mentioned it in an earlier newsletter—more out of random curiosity than anything.

But I had a new reason for my interest that prompted me to drag my husband away from a day in our April vacation for a visit.

Barbara Osborne, a woman from Mississippi, had had no reservations about spending $4,000 for Daddy's "protective" copper casket. The mortuary agreed to hold it while a private family mausoleum was being built. Two months later—when Barbara went to place flowers for Father's Day—the casket was "stinking to high heaven." Batesville took four months to supply a new casket. A video of the rotting flesh made during the transfer confirmed Barbara's worst fears. Barbara now has an $8 million law suit against Batesville for consumer fraud.

When Barbara discovered FAMSA last summer (a friend had seen the U.S. News article), she was relieved to find a sympathetic ear and someone who understood the issues. Sometimes Barbara called me every day, several times a day. "Do you know any experts on decomposition," she lamented during one such call. Fishing for something—anything—she could research on her own, I casually mentioned the Body Farm.

Barbara is a sharp lady, a real bull-dog and go-getter. So I shouldn't have been surprised when she called back the next day. She had learned the name of the director and found Dr. Bass off on a summer sabbatical at Tulane University. In the course of their conversation, Dr. Bass mentioned that UT had had a contract with Batesville Caskets for almost eight years. Staff at the forensic center monitored monthly the gases being expelled from the caskets that Batesville had shipped there. Barbara quickly asked him if he would testify in her court case. Dr. Bass agreed.

Barbara excitedly gave me his number at Tulane and urged me to call. Dr. Bass and I had a delightful conversation. I read him some of the casket chapter from my nearly-finished book, and he was quite amused—"You really know what you're talking about. I'll have to buy a copy," he chuckled. "I'll send you one," I offered, and made sure his name was on the list for gratis copies when it was finally published last fall.

It was with some shock that Barbara learned at the end of March this year that Dr. Bass was now under retainer for Batesville Casket Co. That probably explained, in part, the protective order that Batesville lawyers had wanted Barbara's lawyers to sign off on—with that in place, anything that Batesville chose to mark "Confidential" during the trial could not be made public.

But "confidential" was not what Barabara had in mind. Although she has suffered personally—nightmares and a consuming anguish over the unwitting casket choice—she feels strongly that "protective" caskets need to be exposed to the public as consumer fraud. It's hard not to agree. The Batesville web site states:

The urge to keep our loved ones protected and safe is fundamental to all of us. No wonder so many families are comforted by the ability to protect their loved ones with the Batesville Monoseal protective casket.

It's going to keep out air, water, and other elements, we're told. But Batesville doesn't bother to reveal that—by keeping air out—a sealed casket (in anything but the most frigid weather) becomes a crock-pot that is likely to turn the body into a smelly stew, whether it's embalmed or not. And Batesville had six caskets at the forensic center to study this stew!

If Batesville were going to ask the court to keep Dr. Bass's testimony confidential during the trial, then maybe we had to find another way to bring this intriguing Batesville study into the open. Surely not everyone at UT was under retainer to Batesville. A visit to poke around seemed imperative. In fact, it seemed fated, with Knoxville already scheduled as the first stop on our vacation.

I called Dr. Bass, and we chatted about my book. He was impressed, he said, and had been sharing information from it with others. I mentioned that I would be visiting Knoxville in a couple of weeks and would love a tour of the Body Farm. (I didn't mention Batesville.) Proud of the distinction he'd created for UT with the forensic center, he was eager to oblige. But, alas, he would be on a speaking trip that week. Not to worry, he said. He'd get someone else to show me around. How convenient, I thought, though I was disappointed not to meet this colorful man who always seemed to have a twinkle in his voice.

Dr. Murray Marks has been at UT off and on for nearly ten years. With Dr. Bass on emeritus status, Dr. Marks has taken over most of the classes Dr. Bass used to teach. He also supervises many of the projects that go on at the Body Farm—a name he doesn't much like, he said, because he doesn't think it sounds respectful of the work there.

We followed his pickup out of town to the remote location. A high wooden fence blocked any view through the metal-link barrier, topped by a coil of razor wire, that surrounded the wooded acreage. Before we went in, Dr. Marks gave us a history of the center. Only a few of the bodies there are from unclaimed indigents. The majority have been donated for scientific study, he emphasized, and remains can be returned to the family if requested. Most, however, will join the skeletal collection the university is building.

"It's almost beautiful," commented Dr. Marks, of the natural events that follow decomposition and the body's disintegration into the cycle of nature. As the gates swung open and I noticed the spring wild-flowers beside the hillside paths, I had to agree. With most bodies 20 feet apart or so, there was no overwhelming "smell," though the day was still early. An aroma of pungent"spring earth" was more like it.

We saw 15 or 20 corpses in varying stages of decay above ground as we walked the paths, some covered by tarpaulins to keep off the vultures, though we saw armadillo-like bugs busy at work when we peeked underneath. Others have been buried and will be exhumed at various stages. A marker next to each cadaver noted the date it had been laid out. After only four winter and spring months of Tennessee weather, all that remained of one was the skeleton with clinging fragments of leathery skin, tangled with pieces of disintegrated clothing—a flimsy nightie, perhaps, or a wrapping sheet. In the summer, it takes about two weeks, I was told. As the body decays, volatile fatty acids are released, with the liquid run-off killing the vegetation nearby.

Two had been embalmed. "Only the vascular system is preserved," pointed out Dr. Marks, the visceral cavity agape and empty, the skin more white and intact than on others we saw. It didn't look "natural." The other bodies were becoming a rich sienna brown, an earthen color—"scorched" as the tissues broke down and fatty acids ran off into the soil. (Soil under a decomposing body is another subject of study.)

But the object of my greatest curiosity was at the center of this almost park-like area—the Batesville study. Four cement vaults (painted black to absorb more heat) sat side-by-side on top of the ground. Two tubes ran out of the end of each into a mechanical unit tucked under a small shelter nearby—one outlet marked "liquid," the other marked "air." They had cut down some trees to increase the sunlight, said Dr. Marks. I asked what the purpose of the study was. Dr. Marks said that formaldehyde boils at 115 degrees and that he'd understood there were problems at mausoleums in the Southwest.

If Batesville already knew about hot weather mausoleum problems (long before Barbara Osborne bought her protective casket), what would this study show? I wasn't able to learn much in the way of details because the first graduate student on the project, Brent Goodman, had signed a silence agreement with Batesville at the beginning of the study. I had to glean bits and pieces from others.

Every month for the first few years, data would be collected and sent off to a Batesville laboratory in Indiana. That included a paper tape where a stylus had logged the daily temperature and humidity inside each casket/vault. Liquids were drawn out with a manual pump. Those samples, along with gas samples, were shipped off, too. By the end of three years, there wasn't much change in the composition of the samples, but the study has continued on for nearly five years more, with liquid and air drawn less frequently. (In contrast, bodies exposed to the elements had finished the decomposition process and were totally dehydrated in a fraction of the time.)

If different caskets and different embalming methods were used, as I'd been told, was there an obvious difference from one to the next? And where did Batesville get the bodies for these four above-ground vaults and another two buried in the hillside. Dr. Marks didn't know.

When I called Batesville to see what I could learn, I was referred to Joe Weigel, director of public relations for the casket company. He was very cordial and very smooth. He told me that the reason Batesville did the study was to "help Dr. Bass build more knowledge and to help improve our products." When I asked what they learned, he said the study wasn't finished— "We don't have enough information yet." That was strange, I said, because after the first three years, there apparently was no change in the character of samplings. He insisted that the project wasn't over. Maybe I'll call him again in September—five months from now—when it is.

As to where Batesville got the bodies—through "the proper channels for scientific study" was all Weigel would say. Mmmmm. I suspect that's a new wrinkle for body donors to consider.

If there had been any substantial revelation in this study, it likely would have been put to good use in the industry as soon as it was known. Having read the trade journals for over 12 years, I've seen no such news appear.

My guess is that this study merely verified what any cemeterian and most funeral directors already know: Embalmed or not, dead bodies decompose to one degree or another. And a sealed casket creates a smelly stew.

Last Updated ( Monday, 14 July 2008 14:41 )  
Comments (24)
1 Friday, 10 October 2008 11:55
I think it is just horrible to prey on families with the "sealed caskets", etc. I don't encourage people to purchase sealed caskets. I encourage people to buy caskets purely for the looks and make it clear that when caskets are surrounded by flowers they all look very similar. I sell funerals for 1/4 what other funeral directors sell for and I stay very busy. The funeral industry is full of funeral directors that are waiting to prey on the consumer.
2 Friday, 11 September 2009 15:35
rita van wetten
dr. Marks. is it at all possible that phenol and cresol found in the jaw, tooth, brain, liver and kidneys of a buried body and nowhere in the soil have been part of decomposition or due to embalming?
3 Monday, 21 September 2009 15:03
Ann Allegrini
My sister is considering an above the ground burial, but is not sure if bugs can enter the casket of those buried in those walls.

We were told when we buried our parents that they would stay intact and look as if they were just buried for about 25 yeras. This isn't true? There's the "stew" you spoke about. That happens in mausoleums too? Bugs happen too?

Isn't cremation cleaner?

Ann
4 Monday, 21 September 2009 15:19
Josh Slocum
Hi Ann,

The truth is that no matter where you're buried - in the ground, or in a crypt above ground - microbes and bugs are going to be there. There is nothing you can buy - no type of casket, no sealing vault - that will stop decomposition or keep air, water, dirt, or fauna out for any indefinite period of time.

Anyone who told you that a person buried in a mausoleum will look just the way they did 25 years ago is lying, and in a particularly cruel way.

It's wise to remember that decomposition is a natural process, and that there's nothing you can do to stop it. Folks like your sister are ripe targets for a funeral home or cemetery willing to take advantage of her fears about decomposition and bugs in order to sell her overpriced options that won't do a thing to stop it.

I think it's far better for her to try to stop focusing on things she cannot change (what happens to her dead body and the fact that it will decompose), and that - truthfully - she's not going to know about anyway. Otherwise, she'll have her pocketbook emptied by an unscrupulous salesman.


Josh Slocum
exec. director, FCA
5 Thursday, 19 November 2009 12:50
dick
i think this is very intersting
6 Thursday, 10 June 2010 20:12
J. Cofer
I talked to a cemetery lot salesman today because I was interested in 2 burial lots. We discussed the prices of the lots then went into the other costs affiliated with a burial. The morturary is a separate expense, i.e., casket, flowers, viewing, church services, and grave side service. The burial site will have you making decisions in minutes. First, there is the valt that is necessary to keep the ground from caving in, and there are types ranging from $1000 to $2500. The salesman was quick to say that the $1,000 valt was not "waterproof". I asked him, " Well, who would want to know that they buried their loved one in a valt that would allow water to seep in?
He said, "You would be surprised". I have researched and now know that there is no casket, valt, container, that will keep the body intact, indefinitely. A sealed tight container is the worse, because the loved one produces various gases and substances that will create a "stew", like a crock pot! I would certainly not want that. I now realize that decomposition is not a bad thing and that it is nature's way of doing the right thing for the right reasons. A simple wooden coffin is the best way to go, and I would get the least expensive liner/valt that meets specifications and commit our loved one to the soil, from whence they came. Remember man, that thou art dust, and to dust (earth) ye shall return. Remember the joy and love and bury your loved ones with dignity and love for nature. You will have enough expenses with the opening and closing of the grave site, the memorial marker, and if it is a Saturday, you will pay extra in some states because the crews are all part of a union and they get extra pay. Remember, this is a business and don't think that you need to be prey to the "emotional Pocket book syndrome". Use the left over money to help someone in need, have a great party celebrating their life and know that you did your very best. A good lesson was learned by me today!
7 Thursday, 10 June 2010 20:19
Josh Slocum, FCA Executive Director
Kudos to you, J. Cofer! I'm glad the article helped put your mind at ease about the condition of the body at burial. I doubt many of us would think, on our own, that we "needed" a "waterproof vault" if it weren't for the salesmanship in the industry. It's good to get free of unrealistic expectations and fears (cheaper, too).
8 Monday, 05 July 2010 14:46
peter santamaria
after reading all these articles, which i found extremely interesting i am going to be cremated....My mind is made up..
9 Thursday, 08 July 2010 15:01
Tyler Batley
Rotting in the ground or burning in a retort. Before you commit to cremation, perhaps you should read an article or two describing what exactly happens during that process. Of course, as Mr. Slocum says, it's best to not focus on what you can't change and won't even know about.
10 Friday, 30 July 2010 21:55
MantaRay
Simple question to people who work or have worked in the cemetery business. As far as Mausoleums/crypts go.....how fast/slow is the decomposing stage in a regular environment (in other words not in the AZ desert, but just the middle of the road conditions and with the casket not sealed). I'm sure some of you have seen the insides of caskets stored in crypts from a few months to several decades. I was just wondering what is a typical timeline and what would be seen or not seen.

So like after 10 years? 40 years? 75 years?

Thanks in advance for your reply...I always wondered about this.
11 Saturday, 14 August 2010 16:56
Anonymous funeral director/embalmer
Hi MantaRay, I'm happy to answer your question regarding the decomposition of human remains that are interred in crypts. Crypts have air vents and drains in them. The crypt floor has a slight slope to it to allow body fluids to flow towards the back of the crypt where the drain is, should they leak out of the casket. Using an unsealed casket allows dry air to flow over the remains. As the body decomposes, body fluids start to leak out of the remains. By having airflow, this allows the fluids to evaporate and allows for dessication of the body (drying up) The end result is a dehydrated, body. Some faces are recognizable and some are not. Each is uniquely different. There are many variables on how long this process could take. Are the remains inside an air conditioned mausoleum, or are the remains outside in wall crypts where the temperatures can get very hot. But it's been my experience that the remains in a non-sealed casket are usually completely dessicated within 7-10 years.

Sealer caskets on the other hand, do not allow any air to reach the remains or for any body fluids to evaporate. And that allows for up to several gallons of body fluids and embalming fluids for the remains to float in, and turn to mush. Eventually, the fluids will eat through the casket from the inside, and leak out into the crypt chamber. In some cases, it can run down the front of the crypt into the public area and make a horrific mess. Not only in sight, but smell as well. And don't forget, that since a sealer casket doesn't allow gasses to escape, the casket remains under pressure, and when it leaks, it comes out under force. Most crypts are designed and built to take care of this problem behind the scenes, so the public never knows. But in some cases, there are leaks.

I hope this answers your question. I apologize for being graphic in my description, but I want to give you an honest answer. My credentials are over 35-years in the funeral industry.
12 Friday, 20 August 2010 21:01
Mike Nichols
Your answers to these questions are the best I've ever read, and I've learned more from the past few minutes of reading your writings, than I've known in my lifetime. Thank you for your to the point, up front answers.
13 Sunday, 29 August 2010 18:11
MantaRay
:-)
14 Wednesday, 01 September 2010 22:52
Eric
This is more or less a followup to an answer already given previously. My dad passed away in April 2008 from esophageal cancer and is buried indoors in an air conditioned/heated moseleum on the heart level. I have seen the insides of the crypts. They are solid concrete all the way around with no openings (solid cement tube). The only part that is not solid concrete is the front. That has a marble front. The casket is placed on a tray that has sides to it. On average, how much of the body can i expect to see to be still around right now ? Since the crypt is indoors and the crypt walls have no openings (solid cement tube), how can there be bugs/insects/flies ? If there are bugs, how would they get in ? Where would they come from ? I know there is no exposure to temperature changes or to water/moisture. It just seems that when a person is buried indoors in a crypt that is solid concrete on all sides except the front, it would serve to isolate the remains from the outside.
15 Sunday, 31 October 2010 21:47
Lucy
When being burried, are you required to buy a vault?
16 Sunday, 14 November 2010 22:52
cool in washington
I purchased two indoor crypts several years ago but now have been taking more of an interest due to a diagnosis of a terminal disease. I've been to the mausoleum several times in the last few months. There is a very strong odor in there; not particularly that of discomposing bodies but more of an embalming fluid, chemical kind of smell. The casket that I chose is a Batesville with the seal. From reading these comments I think I am better off to choose a less expensive coffin minus the "seal" feature because I don't really care about being preserved, nearly as much as becoming a toxic stew. I'm completely happy to just dessicate and become a skeleton. Burial is simply not an option for me personally because of the claustaphobia issues and cremation is out as well. Do you think that the mortuary would answer my questions honestly if I asked to meet with them about my concerns, ie: the odor, the decomposition, the seal?
17 Monday, 15 November 2010 17:33
Josh Slocum, FCA Exec. Director
Hi there,

I don't know whether the funeral home will be honest with you, but we can hope so. You're right that a sealer is exactly the kind of casket you *don't* want in a mausoleum. Or, you could give the funeral home and mausoleum permission to not to lock the lid down so that air can get in (but yes, the extra expense of a sealed casket is a waste of money).

If you go to funeral home and mausoleum to ask, please come back and report what they say!
18 Sunday, 28 November 2010 21:53
Joe O.
Most modern mausoleums do have drains/vents built into them, mainly because of sealer caskets that have ruptured, sometimes spraying body fluids within the chamber. You can look around the 'net and find stories about families who have sued funeral homes after buying these sealer caskets. I hope more people begin choosing "green" funeral options, which do away with embalming and caskets. Basically you are wrapped in a biodegradable cloth, then placed in a biodegradable container such as a wicker basket, bamboo or anything that will deteriorate quickly and cleanly. No vault is needed and you simply decompose in the ground and used by nature as plant/insect food. Honestly, you won't know what method is used once you're gone and I'd rather not having my family spending a lot of money to stick in a hole, never to be seen again. To the gentleman who was afraid of the mausoleum due to claustrophobia, I assure you that no matter how you're buried, you're gonna be in tight quarters. More importantly, you will not know about it so I would suggest the cheapest method that allows your family to grieve and say goodbye without putting a financial strain on them. If you have insurance, thats great. let them spend it on something they can use versus sticking it in a hole to rot and decay with you. I am being very serious here. I understand that we have so many traditions that are hard to break; I just don't want my family robbed by a funeral home while they're in the midst of grieving...which is a bad time to have to buy funeral services.
19 Monday, 03 January 2011 20:56
George Slade
After reading Mary Roach's Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, and the above comments about "green" funeral options versus the gruesome, god-awful notion of a body stewing in formaldehyde and a "sealed" casket, I'm more convinced that the less energy used to convert my flesh back into dust, the better. I'd prefer not to take up cubic footage once I'm gone. Let places and memories carry me forward; let people remember me wherever they want.
20 Friday, 07 January 2011 17:43
Elizabeth W.
I read through the comments and saw "Peter"'s response that he's made up his mind about cremation. After reading this, I have to say it certainly looks like a better option. That said... what IS involved in cremation - from a non-biased sales-oriented point of view? This article was incredibly informative, and I'd like to find something similar about crematory services also.
21 Sunday, 13 February 2011 19:31
Tyler Batley
Ask your funeral director why sealers are so much better when their "top of the line" are most likely uber expensive wood caskets that don't seal. Prepare for a song and dance fit for Broadway.

Still, I'm going in a B'vlle Oregon. Just leave the vent cap off.
22 Tuesday, 29 March 2011 00:17
Living Forever
Keep breathing is the secret to long life.
23 Sunday, 12 June 2011 02:29
Ugh.
Horrific. OMG. : (
24 Sunday, 30 October 2011 08:41
marc stayduhar

Hi all, I can't remember where, but I recently glanced over an article on mausoleums that where leaking in the western PA area where I live. That got me to thinking- both my parents, and several aunts, uncles, and cousins are interred above ground in mausoleums. I have always realized that embalming is to keep things tidy during viewing, and in no way gaurantees no decay. However, I never gave any thought to leaving the casket lids slightly open in the crypts. I can remember bumping heads with my families funeral home's ( the one all my relatives have passed through) owner/director back in 1985 when my mother passed on. He tried to tell me that the casket I chose for her was gauranteed water tight for thirty years, and told him he was full of crap! I have been in construction all my adult life and I can accurately tell you "nothing" is water tight around here for thirty years! But that didn't matter because she was interred above ground. Here in the northeast I wonder if the time of year will determine the rate of decomp? It seems logical that, as an example, my parents where interred in Nov, and Dec, and my aunt in july.  I think this week, I'm going to pay the cemetery a vist and get some answers, along with the funeral director. I hate being lied to, and I will kic k ass and take names if that is the case! thanks for a great article, more people need to read up on this subject regardless of their ability to handle the truth. It's just another fact of life.

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