Exhumation in a sentence as a noun

[1] These things take time for reasons of doing what may involve the respectful and dignified exhumation of potential corpses. If it's just some anomaly then the people writing **** like this have a LOT of words to eat.

If there's a concern of exhumation, you could always go the cremation route. And to make those intentions clear, tattoo "Burn After Reading" somewhere for a coroner to easily spot.

I don't believe any sort of exhumation has been performed - or if so, it hasn't been reported. I think it's likely therefore that this is an approximation/estimate from whatever data is coming up in the radar.

Just when you think there's a real possibility of exhumation and further analysis there's known disinformation circulating. What I would really like to see is X Ray photography.

Also this bit from the article about a baby that allegedly had a skull fracture: > Later exhumation of the child and examination of the skull have shown that there was no skull fracture. It is thought Dr. Smith confused the normal gap between the baby's skull plates for an injury.

His exhumation and posthumous public beheading seems totally unsurprising after that lot.

Should water and soil samples start coming back positive those with power of attorney should also be able to order exhumation of the bodies assuming this would be relevant and assuming people were not cremated. If the suspect was heavy metals they would still be present.

Com/zolotaryov-exhumation-3? rbid=18461 Tumanov - pathologist on the TV show - claims that Krivonischenko's burns are a sign of prolonged exposure to fire - not an accident casue even semi-conscious person will react to contact with fire.

Human remains of Catholics are buried until their cause for canonization calls for exhumation and examination of the relics. By the time of canonization, division of the relics has begun and they are distributed for veneration to various communities and places.

Yes, in general there is a legal approval needed for exhumation, but in this case the identity of the bodies is unknown, so in order to put a name next to their remains and uncovering some parts of history, archaeologists are allowed to open the tombs and hence to exhume the bodies found inside.

Exhumation definitions

noun

the act of digging something out of the ground (especially a corpse) where it has been buried

See also: disinterment