The first answer would be NO. Bleeding takes a heartbeat. If actual bleeding occurred then the "body" was not dead.
Fluid leakage can however take place postmortem pre-rigor depending on the position of the corpse. Upon death the first stage of decomposition called Livor mortis starts twenty minutes to three hours and fluids are congealed in the capillaries in four to five hours. Maximum lividity occurs within 6-12 hours. The blood pools into the interstitial tissues of the body.
Some arteries will bleed a person out in only seconds, others take a few minutes and internal bleeding can leave a person in pain for hours before death. Normally no more than a day.
its from your stomach acids eating away from your stomach walls.
They make you bleed to your death so you can't get pathogens.
the brachial artery pumps out 30 liters of blood a minute. the human body only has 5 liters. you'll bleed to death in less than 15 seconds
In the human body rigormortis starts to set in about three hours after death. The body will reach full rigormortis about 72 hours after death and then start to disappear.
God has no physical body and so cannot bleed. Jesus, however, did bleed as he had a human body.
Eventually the black death stoped and faded because every body had roses under there mouth so they will not breath in the disease
There are many people and animals that will bleed after death. These animals will bleed until there is no pressure pushing blood out of them.
The purpose of the coronary artery is to carry blood through the body. This is one of the main arteries in the body, and if it gets punctured, a person could bleed to death quickly.
a pure bleed means when the body bleeds with no impurities
Once the individual dies, the heart will no longer be pumping. Therefore, there won't be the profuse bleeding that occurs in the minutes before death. Instead, the open wounds will sort of "ooze" blood, as morbid as that sounds. Then the body will undergo typical decomposition.
Not unless it's leaning on something