There have been all kinds of techniques and skills employed to restore and preserve dead human bodies, it goes far beyond the usual white room business with embalming fluid. at times taxidermic techniques have been used. A long time ago I saw something in an antique shop that was about 39 inches tall, had a proportionate female figure of an adult woman , and was dressed in a female Knight costume, and laid out in a modified steamer trunk! There was a small printed sign- reading Do not Touch, and also Not for sale, appropriately in French Gothic lettering. The girl"s legs drooped below the kness, indicating she was a preserved corpse and not a statue or doll. This certainly fits your question. The owner of the shop was reluctant to part with or even talk in details about his ( Little Joan). it was strange, around l97l.
Once a body was confirmed dead it was stuffed with embalming fluid. This was to help preserve the body for the afterlife.
they stuffed it in
Just go find some bodybags if you are going to be hiding a dead body.
It was stuffed with natron salt and then wrapped
they are DEAD animals stuffed with stuffing to take home as teddys no their not they were made just the same as any other stuffed animal
The discovery of the Mississippi? Never. He died on the expedition and his crewmates stuffed his body in a dead log and floated it downriver.
taxidermist
Old newspapers
to keep it clean and healthy.
i can remember most:Stick pony, giant stuffed bull, giant stuffed rabbit, giant stuffed elephant, beach ball, water gun,
The inside of the body was stuffed with linen and herbs and spices so that it would smell nice and so that the body kept its shape.
the dead body of an animal is called 'CARCASS'