50 Insane Facts About Death You Didn't Know

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It is one of the only certainties in  life - from the moment we’re born,   we’re counting down to the moment we die. Death  is an absolute for almost every living thing,   but there are many things  we still don’t know about. Buckle up for fifty insane  facts about death and dying. #50. Death at First Sight When someone expires - especially if they  haven’t been conscious for a while - it   can be hard to tell that they’re really  gone. But there’s one way to check - the   eyes have it. One of the first signs  of death is that a person’s eyes cloud   over, as the body’s functions cease and  oxygen stops flowing to the eyeballs.   If a person’s eyes are open, this can happen as  quickly as ten minutes after the time of death. It’s not the body’s only weird effect after death. #49. Growth in Death? It’s been one of the strangest things people have  noticed after their loved one passes away - they   swear that their nails and hair keep growing  even after death. Is it possible that these   keratin-based body parts are still active  even after all life functions have ceased?   In a word - no. What actually happens is that the  body starts drying out. This causes the skin to   retract and tighten, which pulls it away from  the hair and nails - making them look longer. And there are many dramatic changes  in the body right after death. #48. Unlucky Stiff It’s one of the most famous parts of death -  rigor mortis. The whole body seems to tighten   up and become stiff and hard. This makes the body  hard to move - but it’s only a temporary condition   that begins only a few hours after  death. Within a day to five days,   the body will loosen up - which makes  prepping it for a funeral much easier.   This is a benefit to having  funerals a while after death. But some effects are much...creepier. #47. A Ghostly Noise Imagine, you’re a morgue worker and you’re  handling the latest bodies that came in.   Then suddenly, from the closed room  where you’re the only person working,   comes a ghastly moan! Time to call the exorcist?  Maybe not. As gases left in a body start to   filter out through orifices, this causes the  vocal cords to vibrate. This can make it sound   like a corpse is moaning or groaning - a  terrifying effect, but a totally normal one. But absent intervention, the body  will take care of itself after death. #46. Eating at You Did you know that we technically have more  foreign creatures living in us than our own cells?   We’re full of bacterial cells at  all times, but our body’s defense   mechanisms keep them at bay. As soon as we  die and our body systems cease to function,   it’s buffet time for all those normally helpful  bacteria. They’ll start eating at the body,   and that lets them multiply much faster and  start the process of decomposition in earnest. And decomposition happens  in a lot of different ways. #45. Wax On, Wax Off Grave wax might sound like a product cemetery  owners use to keep everything in good shape,   but it’s actually a natural product. Clinically  known as adipocere, it’s a waxy product caused by   decomposition of body fat that forms on the skin  and can often leave the body looking something   like a wax figure. This only happens when a body  is under wet conditions with minimal oxygen,   and bodies that decompose this  way are a rarity found in museums. Decomposition varies based on conditions. #44. A Grave Timeline How long does it take a body to decompose?  That depends on the conditions. When buried   under normal conditions, without the body being  preserved, it will generally take about a year   for the body to be reduced to nothing more than  a skeleton. But experiments showed that when a   body was kept in consistent fifty-degree weather,  it will be nothing but bones in only four months. But under certain conditions,  decomposition might not happen at all. #43. The Bog Bodies European peat bogs are one of the most unique  places in the world, because they’re cold,   low in oxygen, and highly acidic. That means  that bodies there don’t decompose like normal,   when pulled out of the bog, can look  perfectly preserved for years - or even   thousands of years. When the Tollund Man, an  Iron Age specimen, was found in a Danish bog,   his discoverers assumed they had  found the body of a missing person. And in the harshest of conditions,  bodies can become landmarks. #42. A Frozen Warning Mount Everest is one of the most hostile  climates on Earth, with the mountain above   a certain point being known as the death zone.  So it’s not a surprise that a lot of people die   there - and because on the higher part of  the mountain it never gets below freezing,   most of them stay there. It’s too dangerous  and expensive to bring most bodies down,   and they don’t decompose when frozen solid,  so corpses like the famous Green Boots become   markers that new climbers see, lying there like  they were sleeping, as they climb the mountain. But now, there are easier ways  to keep people from decomposing. #41. Pickling a Person If you’ve chosen the full funeral package for your  loved one, one of the choices you’ll likely have   to make is about embalming. This practice uses a  collection of chemicals to preserve the corpse,   making it more resistant to decomposition. While  it won’t slow down decomposition indefinitely,   it’s a common choice for those who want to  have an open casket funeral - so everyone   can stand around talking about  how natural the deceased looks. That’s enough about the body  after death - how do we get there? #40. Running Out the Clock So how long can humans actually live? While  the average lifespan in the United States   is in the 70s, that’s driven down by those  who die young. Those who make it to the 70s   usually live longer - and a small percentage  make it past 100 and beyond. This tiny group   of centenarians and super-centenarians have an  honorary queen in Jeanne Calment, a French woman   who is the documented oldest person to ever  live - making it to a shocking 122 years old! So how many people have ever died? #39. It’s Crowded Down There The world is more crowded than it’s ever  been, but we’re still only a tiny fraction   of the population of the world that’s already  passed on. There are currently more than seven   billion people on Planet Earth - but the total  population of the planet over all of history   is more than 108 billion. That means that  a hundred billion people have already   died - which is probably not a good sign for  the living if the zombie wars ever come to pass. But what actually puts people underground? #38. Common Cause The United States has kept track of the  most common causes of death for a long time,   and it’s mostly steady. The most  common cause of all? Heart disease,   which not surprisingly takes out many  of the elderly. Cancer isn’t far behind,   but #3 is accidental injury - which is the most  common cause of death for all age groups between   one year old and forty-four. Once you get older,  it’s your own body that’s more likely to get you. But one cause of death isn’t  a cause of death at all. #37. No Exit You hear about it so often - an old person  dies of old age. Well, people may say it,   but you’ll never see it on a death certificate.  That’s because no one has ever died of old age.   What actually happens is that as people reach old  age, the immune system weakens. It becomes easier   for them to catch illnesses, and their body  can’t repair the damage as quickly. So while   old age won’t kill them, it becomes a game of  attrition for what illness will finish the job. But can you die from...water? #36. Too Much of a Good Thing Sure, you can die from water - drowning kills many  people, and scalding water can cause fatal burns.   But simply drinking too much can kill you  as well. A woman who drank six liters of   water in three hours to win a contest  died of hyponatremia, or water overdose.   But unlike other overdoses, this isn’t poisoning.  What actually happens is that you drink too much   water for your body to process, which causes the  sodium levels in the blood to dilute fatally. And speaking of water… #35. A Wet Reveal If you wanted to kill someone, getting rid  of their body in the water would seem to be   smart. After all, everyone would just assume they  drowned, right? Not if forensic scientists are   on the case. Because the body stops functioning  after death, detectives can figure out if someone   was dead before they hit the water by looking at  their lungs. If someone drowned, their lungs will   have filled up with water, while a corpse dumped  in the water would still have lungs full of air. But not all methods for solving  murder held up with time. #34. The Eyes Have It When someone was murdered in the 19th century,  investigators did something unusual - they would   remove the victim’s eyes and dissect them. This  is because they believed that the eyes were like   cameras, capturing images - and their killer’s  image was the last thing they ever saw.   Not surprisingly, though, they never  seemed to find where that image was stored,   and this became one of many weird scientific  ideas that didn’t survive the march of progress. Some causes of death are a lot  rarer than you might think. #33. Not So Scary When someone paddles into the  water, they’re no doubt keeping an   eye out for any hungry finned predators.  But dying of a shark attack is incredibly   rare - and more people die of selfie-related  incidents per year. Likewise, skydiving seems   like a terrifying and dangerous activity,  but the technology is surprisingly safe.   More people die per year in dance parties and  nightclubs than die by falling from an airplane. But three days of the year may  be deadlier than any other. #32. Nothing Like the Holidays What days are likeliest to end in death?  Well, if we’re talking about natural causes,   they shoot up on Christmas, the next day, and  New Years’ Day. While murders and suicides   actually decrease during the holidays, many  people who might be feeling sick will put off   treatment because they don’t want to check into  the hospital on a holiday - and by then it might   be too late. Add in many top doctors taking  the holiday off, and it can be a deadly combo. But one cause of death may outstrip all the other. #31. The Ultimate Plague What’s the deadliest disease of all time?  No, it’s not Covid-19, the Spanish Flu,   or even the Black Death. Instead, it’s  a common disease that has been ravaging   the world for centuries - Malaria.  It’s so deadly because it’s spread by   mosquitoes - and as anyone who ever tried to  have a barbecue outside in the summer knows,   those things are everywhere. It kills more  than half a million people in most years,   and likely killed far more in the past  when medical treatment wasn’t as advanced. For many, death comes quickly -  but what happens when it’s slower? #30. The Last to Go When people die due to illness, organ failure, or  cancer, they can often convalesce in the hospital   or hospice facilities for an extended period,  being kept comfortable with medicine. When   they reach the final stage and their death is  imminent, their senses will begin failing them,   although they’re often too sedated to react.  But one sense is the last to go - hearing,   which allows their loved ones to keep  talking to them up until the very end. Some deaths are a lot less  peaceful than that, though. #29. Execute This The death penalty became a lot less common in the  20th century, with many nations including all of   Western Europe abolishing it due to human rights  concerns. But fifty-three nations around the   world still execute their worst criminals - and  they use a variety of methods. While the United   States’ favored method is lethal injection,  you’ll find states and other countries that   use the electric chair, the gas chamber, the  firing squad, hanging, and even beheading. But which country executes the most people? #28. The Final Countdown The United States only executed 22 people in  2019 - mostly due to the lengthy appeals process   and the fact that many states no longer have  the death penalty. It’s believed that the   country with the most executions is China,  executing over a thousand people in the same   year - but they don’t release execution  data, classifying it as a state secret.   That makes the official champion Iran,  which executed 251 people in 2019. But one method of execution  has fallen out of favor. #27. The Chopping Block It’s one of the most infamous inventions  of all time - the guillotine. A sharp blade   attached to a machine that will  cleave a head from the neck in a   second. But it was first conceived  of by Dr. Joseph Ignace-Guillotin,   a French physician, as a humanitarian invention.  He believed it would be a painless and humane way   to carry out executions - despite opposing the  death penalty himself. He would then watch as it   was used to carry out countless political  executions during the Reign of Terror. It seems to be the standard at every cemetery,  but why are graves dug six feet deep?   It’s a lot of work - and a health hazard for  anyone who might trip into it. It turns out   that the root of the tradition comes back to  the Black Death, the deadly plague that ravaged   Europe. In the year 1665, London was suffering  an outbreak, and the Mayor decreed that all   bodies should be buried six feet underground to  try to stem the spread of disease from corpses. But the traditional burial  may be falling out of fashion. #24. Burning Up Cremation, where the body is burned  in a powerful oven and the remnants   are returned to the loved ones, is becoming  a popular alternative to burials. In fact,   it’s actually surpassed the popularity of burial  in the United States, and it’s estimated that   by 2040 as many as 80 percent of people may  choose cremation. This is because burial plots   are becoming increasingly costly, and cremation  offers lower costs and increased flexibility. But there’s one common misconception. #23. Where’s the Ash? We’ve all met someone who had grandma’s ashes  on the mantelpiece - or did they? One of the   most common misconceptions about cremation  is that there are ashes involved - but what   is actually returned to the family isn’t ash at  all. It’s a fine powder usually known as bone ash,   but what it actually contains is the minerals in  the bones. The powerful ovens burn away everything   else clean, and the mineral content is all that’s  left. Still, keep the cat away from the urn. But ashes don’t need to stay on the mantle. #22. Going Out In Style Cremation ashes are sterile, non-toxic, and  odorless, which means they can be incorporated   into just about anything safely. So if you  want a more permanent memento of a loved one,   they can be compressed into gemstones.  If you want to celebrate their interests,   the ashes can be mixed into paint or  used in ink for sheet music. And if   you really want to send them out with a bang,  companies can mix the remains with gunpowder   and design a custom batch of fireworks - a  perfect way to send off that rowdy uncle. But one use for cremation remains  may last far longer than the person. #21. Growing After Death For the environmentally-minded, there’s a way to  leave a positive impact on the world after death.   A person is cremated, and their remains are  placed in a biodegradable urn alongside a tree   seed. The urn is buried in a suitable place,  the urn degrades and opens in the soil - and   soon a tree grows from the person’s remains.  After a few years, the tree becomes a perfect   place for the loved ones to gather under the  shade their departed family member provided. But around the world, burial rites  take on some very unique forms. #20. Make It Loud Funerals are usually solemn occasions, but in  New Orleans you might mistake it for a party.   With elements taken from African, French, and  Black American traditions, these Big Easy funeral   processions are led by a big jazz band blowing  horns. They play traditional funeral music at   first, but after the burial, the tone shifts  - and everyone cuts loose. They’ll play upbeat   dance marches, the mourners will dance in the  streets, and send their loved one off in style. But not all the fun is saved  for those who are buried. #19. Smoke and Mirrors On the island of Bali, cremation can be a  dramatic, all-day affair. The locals believe that   cremation releases the soul and sends it off to  its next destination, so it’s common for elaborate   cremations and burnings to be held publicly. But  none was more dramatic than the cremation of the   head of their royal family in 2008. His body was  placed inside a massive wooden bull and burned   in the presence of a giant dragon statue,  in a mass funeral along with 68 other dead. But some traditions are a lot more modern. #18. Fantasy Funeral Have you seen any footage of Ghanian  funerals? Those guys like to live it up!   Not only do they have some great dances, but  they’re known for a unique coffin industry called   “Fantasy Coffins”. These are like those race  car beds you had as a kid - only forever.   People are buried in decorated coffins that  look like the thing they loved most in life,   ranging from a Mercedes-Benz for a rich man, to a  giant bible for a particularly devout churchgoer! In some cultures, the traditions  don’t end with the burial. #17. Turn, Turn, Turn In Madagascar, you might be surprised  to see people digging up a grave.   These aren’t grave-robbers or witch-doctors -  they’re the loved ones of the person in the grave.   The Malagasy people have a unique tradition  where every seven years, they exhume bones,   wrap them in cloth, perform a ritual dance,  and tell stories of the dead. If you think this   probably smells terrible, you’re right - which is  why they start by spraying the bones with wine. This next tradition is not for the faint of heart. #16. Burial in the Sky Buddhists believe the body is not important  after death, because the soul has migrated   to a new being as part of reincarnation. Thus,  they pay tribute to the dead and then cut it up   into pieces. Rather than burying it where  it’s of no use to anyone but the worms,   they place the body on a mountaintop  and let the vultures pick the bones   clean. While it’s an ancient tradition, it’s  still practiced regularly in Tibet today. But few places have more unique burial  traditions than the Philippines. #15. Smoke ‘em Up The Philippines have many ethnic groups,  and many have their own traditions.   The Tinguian people have a strange tradition  where they give their dead a makeover,   dressing them in the best clothes available, and  then sit them on a chair at the memorial service.   They then place a lit cigarette in their  mouth. Hey, at least the dead look relaxed. Another group has a very different tradition. #14. Hollow Ground The Caviteno people live near the city of  Manila, but their tradition is definitely   not a city one. They bury their dead not  in the ground, but in hollow tree trunks.   But not just any tree. When a person knows they  are nearing death due to illness or old age,   they go out and pick their own burial  tree. It’s even common for the person   to live in a little hut by their death tree  while their family works to hollow it out. But whatever the culture, death  is the end of the road...right? #13. What Comes Next The belief in the afterlife is common across  the world, with almost every religion having   some concept of life after death. Some believe in  reincarnation, as each soul becomes a totally new   person or other being after death. Others  believe in ascending to a higher plane of   existence or becoming part of some cosmic  being. Others believe that the first thing   you see after death is a judge - to determine if  you’ve lived well enough to enter the afterlife. But there’s no proof of any of this...right? #12. Back from the Dead? Surprisingly, there are a lot of people who  claim to have seen what comes after death.   These are usually people who nearly died due  to their heart stopping and were revived,   be it due to a heart attack or a surgical  mishap. They often report seeing a white   light or hearing voices. One boy, Colton Burpo,  even reported seeing heaven and meeting people   who were dead before he was born - and  wrote a book about it with his father. But are these afterlife encounters proof  of anything - or just the brain’s tricks? #11. Closer to Earth Neuroscientists who have studied the brain at  the moment of death report that it releases an   increased amount of hormones that cause positive  feelings at the moment of death. This means that   near-death experiences could be caused by these  hormones, making people feel at peace and safe   during their moment of greatest distress. But  how does this explain children knowing things   they have no way of knowing? Well, skeptics  point at an old-fashioned solution - dad   may be coaching his son. Harder to explain is  one woman who floated out of her body and saw   a pair of sneakers on the hospital roof- only  to have a nurse fetch them after she woke up. But has anyone seen...the other place? #10. Oh Hell People reporting seeing the bad ending in the  afterlife is much rarer, but those who did come   back deeply disturbed. They report darkness,  anguish, and distress - and a few have gotten   much more detailed. When a man was shot in the  head and spent an extended period in a coma,   he awoke reporting that he spent that  time being tortured in a terrible realm   of fire and hopelessness. While he had  a religious awakening and wrote a book,   most doctors believe this was the  product of the brain trauma he endured. But what do those who came the  closest to death have to say? #9. Back from Beyond When Velma Thomas had a heart attack in 2008, she  took a turn for the worse and was soon pronounced   dead. Doctors tried to induce hypothermia to lower  her body temperature, but it seemed to be no use,   and she was without brain activity for seventeen  hours as her family was called in to say goodbye.   But when she was taken off life  support, she suddenly started waking up?   The fifty-nine-year-old woman eventually  recovered and came home, but when asked   about what she remembered from her time in  the great beyond, the answer was...nothing. Death is universal - but a full life means  something very different for different beings. #8. The Blink of an Eye The average human lifespan is in the seventies,  solidly on the upper range of animals. But   some animals live a full life in a much shorter  time. Panther chameleons only live about a year,   which means the previous generation is almost  entirely gone before the next generation hatches   from their eggs. Drone ants only live three  weeks, dying soon after mating with females.   But nothing tops the mayfly, which is  born with one purpose - to reproduce.   They spend most of their time as nymphs, and  only have a total lifespan of twenty-four hours. But some animals can put humans to shame. #7. The Heavy Hitters Elephants are one of the few land mammals  with a similar lifespan to humans.   If you can’t stand the thought of losing another  pet, you might want to consider a Macaw - these   colorful birds can live for up to eighty years.  Bowhead whales are the longest-living mammal,   with lifespans of over two hundred  years - one was even found with harpoon   fragments from the 1800s still in it! But  no large animal tops the Greenland Shark,   whose slow growth cycle means they  can live up to five hundred years. But for the longest-lived organism of all,  you’ll have to leave the animal kingdom. #6. Standing Tall What is the longest any living organism  on Earth has escaped death? That would   be found in California’s White Mountains - a  mighty bristlecone pine tree named Methuselah,   for the notoriously long-lived biblical figure.   How old is this tree? Almost five thousand years  old, which means it has been standing tall on   the North American continent before the Great  Pyramid of Giza was even on the drawing board. But is death truly an inevitability  for everyone - and everything? #5. A Tight Squeeze You might have heard the rumor that lobsters  are immortal. Well, that’s obviously not   true - they wouldn’t wind up on dinner plates  if they were. But these sea crustaceans do   not die of old age. They shed their shells and  grow a new one, essentially renewing their body   periodically. The problem is, eventually  they get too big to escape their shell,   and wind up getting stuck in an old one and  dying that way. Not even the lobster can escape. But one creature might have figured  out the secret to immortality. #4. The Immortal Jellyfish One species seems to have the process for  avoiding death indefinitely - Turritopsis Dohrnii,   a tiny jellyfish found in oceans around  the world. They have a full life cycle,   until they reach their dying medusa stage - at  which point they avoid death by turning back into   a tiny ball of cells that begins the life cycle  anew. So they renew their life indefinitely - but   are they truly the same being, or an identical  clone? For a simple jellyfish, there’s really no   difference - but for a human with a mind and  personality, it’s a much bigger question. But will humans eventually figure  out the way to conquer death? #3. The Deep Freeze Some people are already working on it. A  cottage industry has emerged of people being   cryogenically frozen, in the hopes that they  can eventually be revived in the future. The   law dictates that cryogenic freezing can only  happen after the person is pronounced dead,   and it is most commonly practiced by  those who die of incurable diseases.   At least two hundred and fifty people  are frozen in the United States,   and 1500 more have signed up. But contrary  to rumors, Walt Disney was not one of them. But some people have talked about  another form of life after death. #2. Living in the Cloud The development of the digital world has  led some people to wonder - could we live   forever as digital thoughtforms? The idea is  that a process would be developed to read the   brain patterns of a person and upload them to  the digital world, allowing the person’s mind   to continue to exist after death. It sounds  great - except that the technology doesn’t exist.   While research is ongoing, it’s more of a  topic for science-fiction stories right now. But while humans try to escape  death, death just keeps on coming. #1. Keep on Reaping The good news for humanity is that the  global birth rate continues to outpace   the global death rate, and the population keeps  growing no matter what diseases are out there.   The bad news? A lot of people are dying from all  sorts of causes. It’s estimated that the global   death rate is about 7.7 per one thousand  people - a little under one percent of the   population every year. Which means a lot of people  looking over their shoulder for the grim reaper. For more on what happens after death,   check out “Best Evidence of Life After  Death” or watch this video instead.
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Length: 24min 0sec (1440 seconds)
Published: Fri Dec 17 2021
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