This makes a LOT of sense to me... I always threaten my kids that I'll ask to 
be cremated and have my ashes mixed with potting soil and have one of those 
"airplane plants" potted in it.  Then, because those plants are constantly 
producing "offspring" they can keep my memorial alive "forever".  Ha, they'll 
never get rid of me... LOL 

Blessings
Lea Ann Savage
Satellite Beach, FL
321-773-7088
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: Silver List 
  Sent: Friday, September 30, 2005 1:40 PM
  Subject: CS>Sweden's New Funeral Rite


  Sweden's new funeral rite - bodies freeze-dried, powdered and made into tree 
mulch
  By Kate Connolly in Berlin
  (Filed: 28/09/2005)

  A town in Sweden plans to become the first place in the world where corpses 
will be disposed of by freeze-drying, as an environmentally friendly 
alternative to cremation or burial. Jonkoping, in southern Sweden, is to turn 
its crematorium into a so-called promatorium next year.

  Swedes will then have the chance to bury their dead according to the 
pioneering method, which involves freezing the body, dipping it in liquid 
nitrogen and gently vibrating it to shatter it into powder. This is put into a 
small box made of potato or corn starch and placed in a shallow grave, where it 
will disintegrate within six to 12 months.

  People are to be encouraged to plant a tree on the grave. It would feed off 
the compost formed from the body, to emphasise the organic cycle of life.

  The national burial law is currently being updated to accommodate a practice 
that is expected to spread across the country over the next few years.

  The technique was conceived by a Swedish biologist, Susanne Wiigh-Masak, 49, 
who said: "Mulching was nature's original plan for us, and that's what used to 
happen to us at the start of humanity - we went back into the soil.

  "But we need to tell people in this day and age that this can once again be a 
dignified and comfortable option." According to Mrs Wiigh-Masak's method, which 
she has called "promession" - the promise to return to the earth what emerged 
from the earth - the dead body is frozen and dried, using liquid nitrogen.

  A mechanical vibration then causes the body to fall apart within 60 seconds 
before a vacuum removes the water.

  Then a metal separator picks out metals such as artificial hips and dental 
fillings.

  Jonkoping's motivation for converting its crematorium into a promatorium is 
mainly practical. According to European environmental laws, it faced a 
multi-million pound bill for the installation at its 50-year-old crematorium of 
a new gas-cleaning system and furnace.

  http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/09/28/wfreez28.xml