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The Vegan Marxist
31st January 2011, 05:37
Global Warming Uncovers Corpses Frozen in Time
by Stephen Messenger
January 30, 2011

http://www.treehugger.com/scientists-study-inca-child.jpg

Five hundred years ago, three Inca children were left to freeze high in the cold Argentinian Andes as a religious sacrifice. In time, their bodies mummified, having been swallowed in snow and entombed within the glacier, lost to time. But centuries later, in a warmer world, their perfectly-preserved corpses were discovered beneath the melting snow an increasingly common sight. Experts say that as glaciers continue to recede throughout the world, more of their long-guarded secrets will be revealed in the warm grip of a changing climate.

http://www.treehugger.com/frozen-inca-child.jpg

When the three Inca children were discovered thanks to melting in the Andes, their well-preserved, mummified remains helped advance archeological knowledge of their rather mysterious civilization. But some more recently deceased individuals uncovered by the receding glaciers has helped bring closure to mourning families.

For example, the frozen body of 24-year-old pilot, Benjamin Rafael Pabn, was discovered by hikers in Peru over 20 years after his plane crashed in the Andes. If not for global warmings effect on Andean glaciers, his fate might have remained a mystery forever.

It took me a very long time to acknowledge he might be dead, said the pilots mother. Now we have a body. I can visit my son at his burial site and grieve like any mother has a right to do.

http://www.treehugger.com/andes-and-village.jpg

A recent report from The New York Times sheds light on several fascinating discoveries that have been made amid the melting ice of some of the worlds most threatened snow packs.


Scientists say the retreat of the ice is an unexpected boon for those yearning to peer back in time.

It looks like the warming trend seen in many regions is continuing, said Gerald Holdsworth, a glaciologist at the Arctic Institute of North America in Calgary, Alberta. There are still some large snowbanks left in promising places, and many glaciers of all different shapes, orientations and sizes, so the finds could go on for a long time yet.

Some discoveries are personal, allowing families closure after years of mourning loved ones who appeared to have vanished.

http://www.treehugger.com/inca-child-museum.jpg

As global warming continues to cast open these icy graves, such long-preserved corpses are subject to decay and exposure to the elements. For the three sacrificed Inca children who rested so for centuries suspended in time on an Andean glacier, now a climate-controlled casing at an Argentine museum keeps them from decay.

While the degrading affects of passing years seems to pause for those trapped within the ice, for the glaciers, time itself may be running out. In the past few decades, a warming climate in this region has taken its toll on the frozen landscape, threatening the livelihoods of people in the region. Impacted nations have enacted measures to combat the melting, but localized efforts stand little chance in combating the problem without international support.

Scientists say that more bodies will likely be uncovered as the snow continues to melt drawing the dead from their icy graves and reuniting them with a world warmer than the one they left.

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2011/01/global-warming-uncovers-corpses-frozen-in-time.php

Political_Chucky
1st February 2011, 02:21
That is sooo fucking cool, and sad at the same time!

Ele'ill
1st February 2011, 02:27
Absolutely beautiful.

For some reason this makes me less afraid of death.

ar734
1st February 2011, 02:31
sooo...freaky

Klaatu
1st February 2011, 02:35
Absolutely amazing! A great find.

The Vegan Marxist
1st February 2011, 03:10
Absolutely beautiful.

For some reason this makes me less afraid of death.

"I do not fear death, in view of the fact that I had been dead for billions and billions of years before I was born, and had not suffered the slightest inconvenience from it." ~Mark Twain

That single quote stopped me from fearing death.

Ele'ill
1st February 2011, 03:21
But once alive

Yes, I could extend this issue but I am not going to- I like knowing that other people who I may have gotten along with great have also died. We all go.

The Vegan Marxist
1st February 2011, 03:25
But once alive

When alive, the only inconvenience we may suffer from is to what takes place while we're alive. Once we die, we're back to where we were. In a state where there's no destruction, where there's no peace. No hate, and no love. No here and now. To me, that's a sense of true tranquility. I still hate the idea of death, but I no longer fear it.

Political_Chucky
1st February 2011, 09:35
When alive, the only inconvenience we may suffer from is to what takes place while we're alive. Once we die, we're back to where we were. In a state where there's no destruction, where there's no peace. No hate, and no love. No here and now. To me, that's a sense of true tranquility. I still hate the idea of death, but I no longer fear it.

Thats to say that there is no feeling after death. Maybe not in the way we think, maybe we will have some type of unconscious way of thinking, without realizing we are thinking. Or maybe I'll be participating in a life-after-death game of ping pong against Marx.

Political_Chucky
1st February 2011, 09:46
I was trying to find some more information on it btw and I guess these findings are rather old(1999) and went on display in 2007. I'm surprised I have never seen this before.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/photogalleries/mummy-pictures/index.html

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/photogalleries/mummy-pictures/images/primary/1_461.jpg

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/photogalleries/mummy-pictures/images/primary/2_461.jpg

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/photogalleries/mummy-pictures/images/primary/4_461.jpg


http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/09/photogalleries/mummy-pictures/images/primary/6_461.jpg


Three figurines festooned with colorful feathers and woven garments were found alongside the bodies of La Doncella and two fellow victims at the top of an Andean volcano. The three Inca children were left to freeze to death as a sacrifice to the gods, anthropologist Johan Reinhard said.

Black Sheep
1st February 2011, 10:06
Hurray for global warming!