Some religions believe that we were created from the dust of the earth so in dying we are returned to the earth as we once were, completing the grand cycle of life and death. Burial is not the only option as there are above ground crypts and cremation available.
Crematorium.
a crematorium is a place where bodies are disposed of by burning....you mean cemetery, a place where bodies are buried
In the Ground.....That was a hard Question.
kept till the day when its the funeral then they dig a hole 8-9 foot deep the the dead person in the coffin gets lowered down into the hole and then they put the dirt over the top.
Grave
Burial ground.
Caskets
Tomb
their still looking for the dead bodies.
no idea... hope not
the answer is ganges
What ever the owner wants (mainly buried).
They were buried 6 feet down and burned
They either buried them in mass graves or cremated (burned) the bodies.
Dead bodies of the kings, only kings got to be buried in pyramids!
The first person killed (Habeel) was not burnt. He was buried. All heavenly religions require the dead ones to be buried. The Hindus started burning dead bodies when Raja Ashoka killed about 1,00,000 people in a battle. It was found difficult to bury them.
there were no bodies buried or stored
it realates to the digging up and the carriying out of a traitors death on the bodies of the regicides during the restoration
Most of the corpses (dead bodies) were cremated (burned) at the extermination camps during the Holocaust. Others were buried in mass graves during the Holocaust. Recent archaeological 'digs' at Belzec, for example, have uncovered eleven mass graves with the remains of at least 10,000 bodies in each grave.
Buried bodies are gradually consumed by bacteria and fungi. These are present in water, air, soil- and in and on our bodies every day. The are the natural decomposers of dead plants, animals and people.