Flies are typically the first insects to arrive at a dead body, with blowflies (family Calliphoridae) being the most common initial visitors, often arriving within minutes. They are followed by flesh flies (family Sarcophagidae) and other species such as house flies (family Muscidae). As the decomposition progresses, various other insects, including beetles and wasps, may also arrive to feed on the decaying matter. The specific order can vary based on environmental conditions and the state of decomposition.
A dead body, or corpse, has no pulse, a pale look to it, dialated eyes, and are cold.
Sometimes getting there is painful, but it is not painful after you arrive. At least, there is no evidence whatever that one experiences pain after dying.
Answer 1They believed the body should arrive in the after life safely and intact.Answer 2They used mummification to preserve the deceased body so that the soul was capable of moving on to the afterlife.Answer 3they believe the body should arrive in afterlife safely and intactAncient Egyptians, much like other people in other times and places, have struggled with the problem of death. The essential problem is that nobody wants to die, yet everybody eventually does. If you cannot live forever, perhaps you can make your dead body last forever; it is a kind of immortality. It doesn't really make sense, but people are often not sensible when dealing with the subject of their own death.Answer 4prevented it from rotting.Answer 5they mummified the Pharaohs so that the body is preserved so that they can survive the afterlife and be by there gods
Its a corpse.
A morgue
The two insects that typically arrive first at a dead body are blowflies (family Calliphoridae) and flesh flies (family Sarcophagidae). These flies are attracted to the scent of decomposition and lay their eggs on the corpse, which serve as a food source for their larvae. Blowflies are often the first to arrive, usually within minutes to hours after death, while flesh flies may come shortly thereafter. Their presence is crucial for forensic entomology, as it helps in estimating the time of death.
It depends how long the body has been dead. Flies are attracted to foul smelling things so it depends on the dead body.
The first bugs on a dead body are flies and beetles. Maggots and beetle larvae are also found on a dead body.
If there are no flies then there will be no maggots. No flies, no eggs, no maggots.
Maggots are produced by flies, not by dead bodies. Whether maggots would appear will depend on whether flies land on the body. If the room is merely concealed (i.e. hidden) there's nothing to stop flies getting in. If you mean a sealed, airtight room then maggots would not appear.
They can't. There must be a small opening large enough for a flyuto get through.
Dead flies are usually on their backs, legs up in the air, and do not move when poked. Live flies will be more mobile and may attempt to fly away when disturbed. Additionally, dead flies may start to decompose and emit a foul odor.
At midday on day 3.
samneric
No. When an animal dies, flies are attracted to the body, lay eggs that hatch into larvae, and those larvae pupate into flies - just like caterpillars into butterflies, really, just instead of a butterfly laying her eggs on a plant, flies lay theirs on dead flesh.
The 'mummifying' process was done to preserve the remains of their dead. They believed that when a human died they went directly into the afterlife as they were. And in order for them to 'arrive' in the best possible condition they were wrapped in cloths soaked with their preserving substance.
So they can suck all your blood by ice Another Answer: They are attracted to the flakey dead particles of skin on your body.