Re: The Pyres of Dresden
Posted: Thu Oct 23, 2025 6:40 am
The Dresden and Ohrdruf pyres prove that enough heat comes from piling wood under metal rails, to evaporate moisture and cause body fat to catch fire.Callafangers wrote: ↑Wed Oct 22, 2025 7:30 pmThis represents the fundamental misunderstanding Nessie has.Nessie wrote:The photos of the pyres at Dresden and Ohrdruf, prove that a pyre, set with wood below rails and corpses on the rails, once set alight, will burn without having to add additional wood or other fuel, to produce a partial cremation, with some ashes and some body parts. A mix of ashes and body parts are what was found buried at the AR camps.
Here is what is true:
But here is where Nessie's big fail lies:
- Corpses being cremated can and do, eventually, become combustible once the water has evaporated and the remaining fat becomes something of an accelerant, making the corpse have something of a candle-like 'wicking effect', producing heat/energy that can assist in the cremation of other corpses in mass pyres.
In other words, yes, you can barbecue a steak and the fat will ignite/combust, charring your steak. And if you have multiple steaks on the grill on top of one another, the flaming fat of steaks underneath can assist in the cooking ("cremation") of the other steak(s). But the water evaporation of the steaks on bottom will also have slowed down the cooking of the other steaks. And if you have steaks which have been modified to have near-zero fat content, the powerful assistive impact of fat combustion is cancelled out. All of this is calculated/measured/discussed in-detail in Mattogno's works, with authoritative references, and further reinforced by the more recent peer-reviewed research on outdoor pig cremations which suggests an estimate of ~300-500kg per corpse may actually be too low.
- Before this 'wicking effect' (combustion phase) can occur, the corpse has to release/evaporate its water (evaporation phase), which itself also carries heat away from other corpses upon evaporation. Moreover, for the combustion phase, the energy released by each corpse would have been minimized given the widely-reported emaciation of most [Jewish] corpses. This makes a huge difference since almost all of the combustion energy per corpse comes from fat (but even with average/normal corpses, it only reduces the wood needed by ~30-40%). Overall, the lack of body fat in Jewish corpses easily cancels-out any of the moderate gains in efficiency that could otherwise be observed in mass cremation vs. single cremation, keeping the requirement of ~300-500 kg of wood required per corpse (depending on dry vs. green wood and other factors) intact.
All in all, it is inescapable that your "set it and forget it" nonsense has been 100% debunked. All of the science of thermodynamics and all of the evidence of alleged cremations at AR camps works against you.
You cannot claim to 'care about evidence' and yet put your head so deeply in the sand on this matter.
