colors of the wind


Stages of Deterioration in the Human Body
The Moment Of Death: 1. The heart stops. 2. The skin gets tight and ashen in color. 3. All the muscles relax. 4. The bladder and bowels empty.  5. The body temperature begins to drop 1 1/2 degrees Fahrenheit per hour. After 30 minutes: 6. The skin gets purple and waxy. 7. The lips, fingernails, and toenails fade to a pale color. 8. Blood pools at the bottom of the body. 9. The hands and feet turn blue. 10. The eyes sink into the skull. After 4 hours: 11. Rigor mortis has set in. 12. The purpling of the skin and the pooling of the blood continue. 13. Rigor continues to tighten muscles for another 24 hours or so. After 12 hours: 14. The body is in full rigor mortis. After 24 hours: 15. The body is now the temperature of the surrounding environment. 16. In males, the semen dies. 17. The head and neck are now a greenish-blue color. 18. The greenish-blue color spreads to the rest of the body. 19. There is a pervasive smell of rotting meat. After 3 days: 20. The gas in the body tissues forms large blisters on the skin. 21. The whole body begins to bloat and swell grotesquely. 22. Fluids leak from the mouth, nose, vagina, and rectum. After 3 weeks: 23. The skin, hair, and nails are so loose they can easily be pulled off the corpse. 24. The skin bursts open on many places on the body. 25. Decomposition will continue until the body is nothing but skelital remains, a process that can take a month or so in hot climates, and two months or more in cold climates.

Stages of Deterioration in the Human Body


The Moment Of Death:
1. The heart stops.
2. The skin gets tight and ashen in color.
3. All the muscles relax.
4. The bladder and bowels empty. 
5. The body temperature begins to drop 1 1/2 degrees Fahrenheit per hour.

After 30 minutes:
6. The skin gets purple and waxy.
7. The lips, fingernails, and toenails fade to a pale color.
8. Blood pools at the bottom of the body.
9. The hands and feet turn blue.
10. The eyes sink into the skull.

After 4 hours:
11. Rigor mortis has set in.
12. The purpling of the skin and the pooling of the blood continue.
13. Rigor continues to tighten muscles for another 24 hours or so.

After 12 hours:
14. The body is in full rigor mortis.

After 24 hours:
15. The body is now the temperature of the surrounding environment.
16. In males, the semen dies.
17. The head and neck are now a greenish-blue color.
18. The greenish-blue color spreads to the rest of the body.
19. There is a pervasive smell of rotting meat.

After 3 days:
20. The gas in the body tissues forms large blisters on the skin.
21. The whole body begins to bloat and swell grotesquely.
22. Fluids leak from the mouth, nose, vagina, and rectum.

After 3 weeks:
23. The skin, hair, and nails are so loose they can easily be pulled off the corpse.
24. The skin bursts open on many places on the body.
25. Decomposition will continue until the body is nothing but skelital remains, a process that can take a month or so in hot climates, and two months or more in cold climates.

(Source: ramirezdahmerbundy, via weird-bizarre-creepy)


Paul Fraser Collectibles’ Top 10 strangest-ever collectibles

#1 Marilyn Monroe’s Seven Year Itch Dress - $5.6m
Ask most people to name Marilyn Monroe’s most iconic film moment, and there would be one obvious contender: the scene in the 1955’s The Seven Year Itch when Monroe dances above a subway grate.
The dress emerged as the highlight in the auction of Debbie Reynolds’ collection at a Los Angeles auction held by Profiles in History in June 2011. Reynolds, herself a  star of the silver screen, acquired much of her collection in a 1970s auction held by MGM studios.
Profiles in History’s sale featured costumes worn by Laurel and Hardy and Audrey Hepburn, among others, Marilyn’s Seven Year Itch was the real heard-turned. In the end it sold for an incredible $5.6m World Record price.

Submitted by Alex Manford

Paul Fraser Collectibles’ Top 10 strangest-ever collectibles

#1 Marilyn Monroe’s Seven Year Itch Dress - $5.6m

Ask most people to name Marilyn Monroe’s most iconic film moment, and there would be one obvious contender: the scene in the 1955’s The Seven Year Itch when Monroe dances above a subway grate.

The dress emerged as the highlight in the auction of Debbie Reynolds’ collection at a Los Angeles auction held by Profiles in History in June 2011. Reynolds, herself a  star of the silver screen, acquired much of her collection in a 1970s auction held by MGM studios.

Profiles in History’s sale featured costumes worn by Laurel and Hardy and Audrey Hepburn, among others, Marilyn’s Seven Year Itch was the real heard-turned. In the end it sold for an incredible $5.6m World Record price.

Submitted by Alex Manford

(via weird-bizarre-creepy)

weird-bizarre-creepy:

Child’s arm, holding the eye’s vascular tissue. Prepared by, Bernardus Siegfried Albinus, 1730.  Bernardus Siegfried Albinus Case in anatomy hall. All preparations by Albinus, Circa 1730.  
From the Museum Boerhaave in Leiden, the Netherlands.

weird-bizarre-creepy:

Child’s arm, holding the eye’s vascular tissue. Prepared by, Bernardus Siegfried Albinus, 1730.  Bernardus Siegfried Albinus Case in anatomy hall. All preparations by Albinus, Circa 1730.  

From the Museum Boerhaave in Leiden, the Netherlands.

(via scumlungs)

TEAM PEETA lol

TEAM PEETA lol

(Source: easyg0)