A coroner can look for signs such as lividity (discoloration of the skin due to blood pooling), rigor mortis (stiffening of the muscles), and different patterns of decomposition in different parts of the body to determine if a dead body has been moved. They may also examine the positioning of items around the body and any disturbances in the immediate surroundings.
A glacier is a piece of ice.
It can tell us how old they are and how and where they moved in the past .
to tell us all apart
They can be either, its hard to tell unless you plant them. If it grows it was alive, if it doesn't it is dead.
Motor Cortex
if it hasn't moved in a week it is probably dead
It would depend on which body part you had. If you had their head, or heart, then I would say yes you can tell if they are dead (they most certainly are in this case). If you had an ear or finger, then no you could not tell if the person were dead.
I think it is in egypt and the dead sea is u have to tell me
bruising
how can you tell if someone has moved on
You're not dead.
Dead men do not literally tell tales - the dead are notoriously silent - but the condition of a dead body will usually provide a clue as to the cause of death (which will matter if there is a murder investigation). It is also true that the tales that you tell while you are still alive may be remembered even after your death.
When the brain is dead and has no signs of activity, when the heart completely stops and cannot be restarted, when there is no pulse or breathing and when the body is cold without breath, pulse and brain activity.
they can tell you the age of dead people
If the dead was not a priest they don't do anything special with the corpse beside bathe it, dressed it and bury it.... I can't tell you what they do with the dead body of someone who was a Voodoo priest/ess.(you are not an initiate)
Uhmm, Its Hard To Tell Because Like They Did NOT Find His Body, So? shut up you dick
Possums do not play dead. Opossums do. A dead possum will just lie there, and death is obvious. As for an opossum - all its physiological functions slow down to an almost-stopped point, but it should still be slightly warm to the touch.