I am not an expert and have not studied this is too much depth but considering body size and development of muscles, I'd say 3 to 5 hours. As you may know, it is about 12 in adults and in children aged 6 to 10 I'd say 7 to 9 hours, but don't quote me on this. This is strictly my overall judgement, sense of awareness and interpretation of previous information.
Rigor Mortis, a stiffening of the muscles, usually starts to take place at around 3 hours after someone is dead with full rigor occurring at about 12 hours after death. After the 12 hour mark the rigor slowly ceases and at around 72 hours rigor disappears.
No. Chemicals in the body begin to breakdown and rigor mortis goes away after approximately 72 hours later.
Livor Mortis and Lividity are one in the same, they are the collection of coagulated blood in an area. Livor mortis can help coroners or forensics specialist estimate how long an individual has been dead based on how far along or how much lividity there is. It can also tell a coroner or forensics specialist if a person has been moved, for example if someone had died on their back lividity should be present on the back, this is because of gravity, so if they find a dead body face down but lividity is present on the back it is apparent the body has been moved.
It depends on the creature in question.
it takes 9 months for the baby to come out and the babe eats yok wen its inside the mothers stomach :)
Provided there were no electrolyte or musculoskeletal abnormalities prior to death, the carcass should be in full rigor within 12 hours.
2 an 1/2 days
No they dont
How long it takes rigor mortis to set in depends on the size of the dog. The stiffening of the muscles usually begins within three hours of death and will affect small dogs much more quickly than large dogs.
The amount of time it take for rigor mortis to set in depends on the size of the dog. Normally, rigor mortis takes 12-24 hours to set in after a dog has died.
For rigormortis to fully set in, it takes approximately 24 to 48 hours. For smaller animals, like squirrels, it may take less time.
The severity of rigor mortis can be used to estimate a time of death. Shortly after dying, the muscles lose their permeability of calcium ions in the muscles and the muscles as a result stiffen. It can take a few hours for rigor mortis to fully set in.
I shouldn't think so. But here are someother interesting facts: Your "traditional" zombies (rotting and limping cos of rigor mortis) shouldn't be able to climb stairs due to rigor mortis and eventually they should just rot away and fall apart be themselves if you leave them for long enough.
When rigor mortis occurs and how long it persists depends on the temperature of the animal's body as well as that of its surroundings. Owners may or may not encounter this phenomenon when their pets die. It is not the contraction of muscles after death but a chemical reaction that results in the hardening of protein filaments in the muscle fibers within 6 to 12 hours and then relaxes those muscles again in 18 to 36 hours.
if it is cold and stiff it is dead it doesnt take long you'll smell it soon.
Rigor Mortis, a stiffening of the muscles, usually starts to take place at around 3 hours after someone is dead with full rigor occurring at about 12 hours after death. After the 12 hour mark the rigor slowly ceases and at around 72 hours rigor disappears.
Much more quickly than in humans. I'm not a professional in either human or animal fields but here are some things that I do know: The smaller the (mammal) animal, the faster the respiration and the faster the heart rate. Rigor mortis is a process of muscles contracting because the energy production system is powered by oxygen. Logically, this means that when a small furry animal stops breathing, the oxygen will be lost from their systems more quickly than in a big animal, and so rigor mortis will be quicker. My cat died yesterday and it took less than two hours for rigor mortis to set in, from last time seen up and walking around to when I got home from school and found him under the couch. While I worked at the zoo last summer, I dealt with many dead animals- for a baby caribou, it took closer to four hours, for pygmy rabbits, less than one. I find the logical processing of the situation sometimes takes away the hurt.