Decomposition - Body Changes - The Australian Museum

Skip to main content Skip to acknowledgement of country Skip to footer

On this page... Toggle Table of Contents Nav

  • Decomposition - Body changes
  • When the heart stops beating
  • Decomposition Timing?
  • What is rigor mortis?
  • What is grave wax?
  • Decomposition - Cheating the decomposers
  • Insects
  • Bacteria
  • Time is variable

Death begins when the heart stops beating. Deprived of oxygen, a cascade of cellular death commences.

It begins with brain cells and finishes with the skin cells. Death is therefore a process, rather than an event.

Brain diagram Defining death There are three main ways that death can be defined: legally, culturally or clinically. Find out more. Dead Pig Decomposition Stage 2: Initial decay - 0 to 3 days after death Stages of decomposition Initial decay Putrefaction Butyric fermentation

When the heart stops beating

  1. Heart stops beating and/or lungs stop breathing.
  2. Body cells no longer receive supplies of blood and oxygen.
    1. Blood drains from capillaries in the upper surfaces and collects in the blood vessels in the lower surfaces.
    2. Upper surfaces of the body become pale and the lower surfaces become dark.
  3. Cells cease aerobic respiration, and are unable to generate the energy molecules needed to maintain normal muscle biochemistry.
    1. Calcium ions leak into muscle cells preventing muscle relaxation.
    2. Muscles stiffen and remain stiff (rigor mortis) until they begin to decompose.
  4. Cells eventually die and the body loses its capacity to fight off bacteria.
  5. The cells' own enzymes and bacterial activity cause the body to decompose - muscles lose their stiffness.

Decomposition Timing?

  • Brain cells can die if deprived of oxygen for more than three minutes. Muscle cells live on for several hours. Bone and skin cells can stay alive for several days.
  • It takes around 12 hours for a human body to be cool to the touch and 24 hours to cool to the core.
  • Rigor mortis commences after three hours and lasts until 36 hours after death.
  • Forensic scientists use clues such as these for estimating the time of death.

What is rigor mortis?

Rigor mortis refers to the state of a body after death, in which the muscles become stiff. It commences after around 3 hours, reaching maximum stiffness after 12 hours, and gradually dissipates until approximately 72 hours after death. Rigor mortis occurs due to changes in the physiology of muscles when aerobic respiration ceases.

Muscles are made up of two types of fibre. These fibres have connections between them that lock and unlock during muscle contraction and relaxation. These connections are controlled by a biochemical pathway within the cell, which is partially driven by the presence of calcium ions. The concentration of calcium ions is higher in the fluid surrounding muscle cells than it is inside the cells, so calcium tends to diffuse into the cell. High calcium levels inside the cell drive the biochemical pathway in the direction that maintains muscle contraction. To relax, muscle cells must expel the calcium ions from the cell and this requires energy molecules to pump them across the cell membrane.

After a body has died, the chemical reaction producing these energy molecules is unable to proceed because of a lack of oxygen. The cells no longer have the energy to pump calcium out of the cell and so the calcium concentration rises, forcing the muscles to remain in a contracted state. This state of muscle stiffening is known as rigor mortis and it remains until the muscle proteins start to decompose.

What is grave wax?

Grave wax, or adipocere, is a crumbly white, waxy substance that accumulates on those parts of the body that contain fat - the cheeks, breasts, abdomen and buttocks. It is the product of a chemical reaction in which fats react with water and hydrogen in the presence of bacterial enzymes, breaking down into fatty acids and soaps. Adipocere is resistant to bacteria and can protect a corpse, slowing further decomposition. Adipocere starts to form within a month after death and has been recorded on bodies that have been exhumed after 100 years. If a body is readily accessible to insects, adipocere is unlikely to form.

Decomposition - Cheating the decomposers

Bodies decompose through the feeding activities of a variety of organisms.

The body will be preserved if:

  • organisms can be excluded
  • the body is made unpalatable
  • the environment is made too hostile for the decomposer organisms
Adult blowfly mouth Corpse fauna Bacteria Predatory beetles Flies & wasps

Insects

Insects can be excluded from a body by deep burial, protective wrapping and sealed crypts. If insects can be excluded, a body will decompose quite slowly, because maggots are the most voracious flesh feeders.

Although an exposed human body in optimum conditions can be reduced to bone in 10 days, a body that is buried 1.2 m under the ground retains most of its tissue for a year. However, the larvae of some blowflies and flesh flies, can easily locate and burrow down to bodies buried at 0.3 m. Adult coffin flies can burrow 0.5 m into the ground in four days.

If insects are excluded and the body decays slowly, other chemical reactions take place. Grave wax (adipocere) accumulates on the surface of a buried body if fatty deposits are permitted to break down slowly.

Bacteria

Bacteria can never be excluded because they are present in the intestine before death. However, the environment can be made unsuitable for bacterial activity by rapid drying of a body (mummification) or the introduction of bactericides (embalming). Similarly, freezing of bodies (cryonics) will prevent decay.

Time is variable

The time taken for a body to decompose depends on climatic conditions, like temperature and moisture, as well as the accessibility to insects. In summer, a human body in an exposed location can be reduced to bones alone in just nine days.

Back to top of main content Go back to top of page

Also in this section

  • Tau tau gallery at entrance of burial site Burial - Toraja, Sulawesi
  • 'Burial Platform (Apsaroke)' Disposing of the dead - Exposure
  • Douglas Knox The AIDS quilt
  • Brain diagram Defining death
  • Alex Zilich Mourning - Jewish mourning
  • Photograph of deceased loved ones Mourning - Victorian Era
  • IT-1386, Collecting ashes Burial, cremation or donation
  • Necropolis Who ends up in a morgue?
  • Death Exhibition Mourning - an introduction
  • Mahafaly tomb with aloalos Burial - Madagascar
  • Vladimir Illyich Lenin Disposing of the dead - Preservation
  • New Caledonian burial chest Disposing of the dead - Burial

You may also be interested in...

Chalcedony blue and white

Gemstones

Gemstones are prized for their beautiful colours and patterns and are used in a range of applications including jewellery, decorative items and as important features of mineral collections.

Read more Ear bar

Body art

The Body Art exhibition explored the many different ways, both temporary and permanent, in which people modify, change, decorate and adorn their bodies. It revealed the what, why, how and where of 'body art'.

TattooingShapingScarringPainting Read more Monograph of the Paradiseidae or Birds of Paradise and Ptilonorh

Biodiversity

Biodiversity is the variety of all living things; the different plants, animals and micro organisms, the genetic information they contain and the ecosystems they form.

About biodiversityBiodiversity is vital Read more Woodland habitat

Habitats

Explore seven different animal and plant habitats: coasts, freshwater, Antarctica, forests, woodlands, arid zone and urban.

CoastalArid zoneWoodland Learn more Spider

Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) micrographs

Stunning examples of photographs taken with the Museum's scanning electron microscope (SEM).

Read more 'Death' Exhibition

Death: the last taboo

Death is a process rather than an event. Learn more about the process and the many natural and human processes that occur after our death.

What happens after death?Disposing of the deadAutopsy Read more Adult blowfly mouth

Corpse fauna

Many kinds of organisms live by feeding on dead bodies. In the process, their activities result in the decomposition of the body and the recycling of nutrients.

BacteriaPredatory beetlesFlies & wasps Learn more Body Bag

Preparing the body for disposal

Find out how bodies are prepared, covered, stored, enclosed and, finally, transported for disposal.

Discover more Light Microscopy - Mark McGrouther

Science of life

Learn about biodiversity, the scientific study of life and organisms, and the story of human evolution.

Stages of DecompositionThe Human storyVirtual Autopsy Learn more Coffins

Body disposal - legal procedures

Certain procedures must be carried out in order to dispose of a human body, including arranging for a funeral, certifying that a person is dead and what the cause of death was, as well as registering the death.

Discover more Maggot

Decomposition - Forensic Evidence

The presence of animals on a corpse can provide information for investigators on some of the circumstances surrounding death.

Discover more Julie Sinuks, Forensic Technician

Morgues and mortuaries

Morgues are places where reportable deaths are investigated by a coroner, while mortuaries are the places where dead bodies are stored temporarily for a range of reasons, including autopsies and preparations for burial such as embalming.

Discover more You have reached the end of the main content. Go back to start of main content Go back to top of page Back to top You have reached the end of the page. Thank you for reading. Website Navigation Dialog Modal
  • What's On
  • AM Shop
  • Join & Give
  • Visit & Book
    • Plan your Visit
      • What's On Calendar
      • Location & Transport
      • Admission information
      • Food & Dining
      • Access & Inclusion
    • AM Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Members-only events
      • Member login
      • Explore magazine
      • Gift Membership
    • Group Bookings
    • Visitor Guides & Map
    • Museum Shop
  • Learn & Connect
    • News & Stories
      • Latest news
      • Read our articles
      • Listen to podcasts
      • Exhibition publications
      • Media Centre
    • Education
      • Education programs
      • School excursions
      • First Nations learning resources
      • Science learning resources
      • History learning resources
    • Culture
      • First Nations cultures and history
      • First Nations Collections
      • Pasifika cultures and history
      • Pasifika Collections
      • World Cultures
      • Cultural Collection Enhancement Project
    • Science
      • Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI®) Submenu
        • Lizard Island Research Station
        • Australian Centre for Wildlife Genomics
        • AMRI Seminars and Lectures
        • Collection Care and Conservation
        • Citizen science projects
        • Expeditions and fieldwork
      • Life & Geoscience Collections Submenu
        • Archaeology
        • Arachnology
        • Entomology
        • Herpetology
        • Ichthyology
        • Malacology
        • Mammalogy
        • Marine Invertebrates
        • Mineralogy
        • Ornithology
        • Palaeontology
        • Frozen Tissue
        • AMRI Collection Enhancement Project
      • Learning resources Submenu
        • Australia over time
        • Earth Science
        • Dinosaurs and their relatives
        • Human evolution
        • Biodiversity
        • Education resources
      • Search our Science Journal
      • Australian Museum Eureka Prizes
      • Animal factsheets Submenu
        • Spiders
        • Native frogs
        • Reptiles
        • Worms
        • Molluscs
        • Sea squirts and sea tulips
        • Jellyfish, anemones and corals
        • Mammals
        • Australian Bats
        • Fishes
        • Birds
        • Insects
        • Plankton
        • Sea stars and sea urchins
        • Centipedes and millipedes
        • Crustaceans
        • Dangerous Australian animals
        • Australia’s extinct animals
    • Climate Change
      • Learn about climate change
      • Impacts of climate change
      • Climate change solutions
      • Stories of our changing environment
      • Climate Solutions Centre
  • About Us
    • About the Australian Museum
      • Organisation & Governance
      • Australian Museum Collections
      • Archives & Research Library
      • History of the AM
      • Visitor information
    • Support the AM
      • Australian Museum Foundation
      • Donate to the Museum
      • Partnerships
      • Become a Member
    • Venue or Exhibition Hire
      • Venues & Functions
      • Touring Exhibitions
    • Join our Team
      • Staff profiles
      • Work at the Museum
      • Awards & Fellowships
      • Student opportunities
      • Volunteer at the Australian Museum
    • Contact
      • Contact List
      • Ask an Expert
      • Ask an Elder
      • Subscribe to our eNewsletter
      • Search our Website
Close navigation modal Website Search Dialog Modal Search website Submit Search Close search modal Photo of two painted shields

The Australian Museum respects and acknowledges the Gadigal people as the First Peoples and Traditional Custodians of the land and waterways on which the Museum stands.

Image credit: gadigal yilimung (shield) made by Uncle Charles Chicka Madden

Close modal dialog Close Modal Dialog Close Modal Dialog Close Modal Dialog

Tag » What Do Dead Bodies Look Like