How long can a preserved human body last before turning to dust?
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
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Some Context
The setting is a fantasy world with lots of magic where Liches exist.
A Lich is "born" through a series of complex, dangerous and horrific rituals that a mage casts upon himself over the course of years, decades even. In order to become a Lich, the mage has to do two things:
- Cast several spells to protect his physical body from decay;
- Transfer his "essence" into a vessel, which he will keep with him always.
The main objective of this ordeal is eternal life - or, at least, to greatly expand one's life expectancy.
While a human lives about 70 to 80 years in this setting, a Lich's lifespan is counted in hundreds of years.
A Lich's body will still age, but at a much slower rate. It will eventually decay and turn into a living skeleton, until the anti-decay spells can't stop him from turning into a pile of dust. As the decay advances, he continuously uses magic to keep himself together and "emulate" whatever he needs to (like his voice).
The Question
What I want is to determine a Lich's lifespan based on actual facts about the decay speed of a preserved human body through existing means, like embalming.
So... how long can a human body be preserved before turning to dust?
Side Note
I've come across two pieces of information before writing this question:
- I've seen a rough estimate that a human body will completely decay in about 8 years without any kind of preservation;
- Some older questions pointed out that a correctly preserved body might stay preserved indefinitely.
I'm not interested in either of these options - the first is too short and the second is way too long. The ideal answer is not the perfect preservation technique, but one that will keep it alright for a considerable amount of time. I will, then, use this number as an estimate to state how long my Liches' bodies last.
science-based reality-check biology creature-design death
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|
show 1 more comment
$begingroup$
Some Context
The setting is a fantasy world with lots of magic where Liches exist.
A Lich is "born" through a series of complex, dangerous and horrific rituals that a mage casts upon himself over the course of years, decades even. In order to become a Lich, the mage has to do two things:
- Cast several spells to protect his physical body from decay;
- Transfer his "essence" into a vessel, which he will keep with him always.
The main objective of this ordeal is eternal life - or, at least, to greatly expand one's life expectancy.
While a human lives about 70 to 80 years in this setting, a Lich's lifespan is counted in hundreds of years.
A Lich's body will still age, but at a much slower rate. It will eventually decay and turn into a living skeleton, until the anti-decay spells can't stop him from turning into a pile of dust. As the decay advances, he continuously uses magic to keep himself together and "emulate" whatever he needs to (like his voice).
The Question
What I want is to determine a Lich's lifespan based on actual facts about the decay speed of a preserved human body through existing means, like embalming.
So... how long can a human body be preserved before turning to dust?
Side Note
I've come across two pieces of information before writing this question:
- I've seen a rough estimate that a human body will completely decay in about 8 years without any kind of preservation;
- Some older questions pointed out that a correctly preserved body might stay preserved indefinitely.
I'm not interested in either of these options - the first is too short and the second is way too long. The ideal answer is not the perfect preservation technique, but one that will keep it alright for a considerable amount of time. I will, then, use this number as an estimate to state how long my Liches' bodies last.
science-based reality-check biology creature-design death
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6
$begingroup$
Are the lich's bodies up and moving around, or do they just need to preserve their body in a closet somewhere in order to keep some sort of spiritual/magical life going? I.e., do they need to worry about arms falling off when they pull open a door or feet slowly grinding away when they walk?
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– Giter
Jan 9 at 15:38
4
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They will use the bodies. As muscles and tissue vanish (or fall off), he will use magic as "crutches" to keep whatever is left in place.
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– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:01
3
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So the bones will be the last thing to go, so I would say look at how bones decay... fleshy soft bits decay pretty quickly, given environmental conditions (is it humid? Pretty fast. Is it arid... well, we have pharaoh corpses that still have their skin... it's just drier and brittle).
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– hszmv
Jan 9 at 17:23
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Indefinitely, minus the half-life of all its atoms.
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– Mazura
Jan 9 at 20:48
2
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This is why I never really considered a zombie apocalypse to be a real threat, especially in warmer climates.
$endgroup$
– Erin B
Jan 10 at 14:50
|
show 1 more comment
$begingroup$
Some Context
The setting is a fantasy world with lots of magic where Liches exist.
A Lich is "born" through a series of complex, dangerous and horrific rituals that a mage casts upon himself over the course of years, decades even. In order to become a Lich, the mage has to do two things:
- Cast several spells to protect his physical body from decay;
- Transfer his "essence" into a vessel, which he will keep with him always.
The main objective of this ordeal is eternal life - or, at least, to greatly expand one's life expectancy.
While a human lives about 70 to 80 years in this setting, a Lich's lifespan is counted in hundreds of years.
A Lich's body will still age, but at a much slower rate. It will eventually decay and turn into a living skeleton, until the anti-decay spells can't stop him from turning into a pile of dust. As the decay advances, he continuously uses magic to keep himself together and "emulate" whatever he needs to (like his voice).
The Question
What I want is to determine a Lich's lifespan based on actual facts about the decay speed of a preserved human body through existing means, like embalming.
So... how long can a human body be preserved before turning to dust?
Side Note
I've come across two pieces of information before writing this question:
- I've seen a rough estimate that a human body will completely decay in about 8 years without any kind of preservation;
- Some older questions pointed out that a correctly preserved body might stay preserved indefinitely.
I'm not interested in either of these options - the first is too short and the second is way too long. The ideal answer is not the perfect preservation technique, but one that will keep it alright for a considerable amount of time. I will, then, use this number as an estimate to state how long my Liches' bodies last.
science-based reality-check biology creature-design death
$endgroup$
Some Context
The setting is a fantasy world with lots of magic where Liches exist.
A Lich is "born" through a series of complex, dangerous and horrific rituals that a mage casts upon himself over the course of years, decades even. In order to become a Lich, the mage has to do two things:
- Cast several spells to protect his physical body from decay;
- Transfer his "essence" into a vessel, which he will keep with him always.
The main objective of this ordeal is eternal life - or, at least, to greatly expand one's life expectancy.
While a human lives about 70 to 80 years in this setting, a Lich's lifespan is counted in hundreds of years.
A Lich's body will still age, but at a much slower rate. It will eventually decay and turn into a living skeleton, until the anti-decay spells can't stop him from turning into a pile of dust. As the decay advances, he continuously uses magic to keep himself together and "emulate" whatever he needs to (like his voice).
The Question
What I want is to determine a Lich's lifespan based on actual facts about the decay speed of a preserved human body through existing means, like embalming.
So... how long can a human body be preserved before turning to dust?
Side Note
I've come across two pieces of information before writing this question:
- I've seen a rough estimate that a human body will completely decay in about 8 years without any kind of preservation;
- Some older questions pointed out that a correctly preserved body might stay preserved indefinitely.
I'm not interested in either of these options - the first is too short and the second is way too long. The ideal answer is not the perfect preservation technique, but one that will keep it alright for a considerable amount of time. I will, then, use this number as an estimate to state how long my Liches' bodies last.
science-based reality-check biology creature-design death
science-based reality-check biology creature-design death
edited Jan 9 at 17:12
Magus
asked Jan 9 at 14:59
MagusMagus
3,0691230
3,0691230
6
$begingroup$
Are the lich's bodies up and moving around, or do they just need to preserve their body in a closet somewhere in order to keep some sort of spiritual/magical life going? I.e., do they need to worry about arms falling off when they pull open a door or feet slowly grinding away when they walk?
$endgroup$
– Giter
Jan 9 at 15:38
4
$begingroup$
They will use the bodies. As muscles and tissue vanish (or fall off), he will use magic as "crutches" to keep whatever is left in place.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:01
3
$begingroup$
So the bones will be the last thing to go, so I would say look at how bones decay... fleshy soft bits decay pretty quickly, given environmental conditions (is it humid? Pretty fast. Is it arid... well, we have pharaoh corpses that still have their skin... it's just drier and brittle).
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– hszmv
Jan 9 at 17:23
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Indefinitely, minus the half-life of all its atoms.
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 9 at 20:48
2
$begingroup$
This is why I never really considered a zombie apocalypse to be a real threat, especially in warmer climates.
$endgroup$
– Erin B
Jan 10 at 14:50
|
show 1 more comment
6
$begingroup$
Are the lich's bodies up and moving around, or do they just need to preserve their body in a closet somewhere in order to keep some sort of spiritual/magical life going? I.e., do they need to worry about arms falling off when they pull open a door or feet slowly grinding away when they walk?
$endgroup$
– Giter
Jan 9 at 15:38
4
$begingroup$
They will use the bodies. As muscles and tissue vanish (or fall off), he will use magic as "crutches" to keep whatever is left in place.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:01
3
$begingroup$
So the bones will be the last thing to go, so I would say look at how bones decay... fleshy soft bits decay pretty quickly, given environmental conditions (is it humid? Pretty fast. Is it arid... well, we have pharaoh corpses that still have their skin... it's just drier and brittle).
$endgroup$
– hszmv
Jan 9 at 17:23
$begingroup$
Indefinitely, minus the half-life of all its atoms.
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 9 at 20:48
2
$begingroup$
This is why I never really considered a zombie apocalypse to be a real threat, especially in warmer climates.
$endgroup$
– Erin B
Jan 10 at 14:50
6
6
$begingroup$
Are the lich's bodies up and moving around, or do they just need to preserve their body in a closet somewhere in order to keep some sort of spiritual/magical life going? I.e., do they need to worry about arms falling off when they pull open a door or feet slowly grinding away when they walk?
$endgroup$
– Giter
Jan 9 at 15:38
$begingroup$
Are the lich's bodies up and moving around, or do they just need to preserve their body in a closet somewhere in order to keep some sort of spiritual/magical life going? I.e., do they need to worry about arms falling off when they pull open a door or feet slowly grinding away when they walk?
$endgroup$
– Giter
Jan 9 at 15:38
4
4
$begingroup$
They will use the bodies. As muscles and tissue vanish (or fall off), he will use magic as "crutches" to keep whatever is left in place.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:01
$begingroup$
They will use the bodies. As muscles and tissue vanish (or fall off), he will use magic as "crutches" to keep whatever is left in place.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:01
3
3
$begingroup$
So the bones will be the last thing to go, so I would say look at how bones decay... fleshy soft bits decay pretty quickly, given environmental conditions (is it humid? Pretty fast. Is it arid... well, we have pharaoh corpses that still have their skin... it's just drier and brittle).
$endgroup$
– hszmv
Jan 9 at 17:23
$begingroup$
So the bones will be the last thing to go, so I would say look at how bones decay... fleshy soft bits decay pretty quickly, given environmental conditions (is it humid? Pretty fast. Is it arid... well, we have pharaoh corpses that still have their skin... it's just drier and brittle).
$endgroup$
– hszmv
Jan 9 at 17:23
$begingroup$
Indefinitely, minus the half-life of all its atoms.
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 9 at 20:48
$begingroup$
Indefinitely, minus the half-life of all its atoms.
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 9 at 20:48
2
2
$begingroup$
This is why I never really considered a zombie apocalypse to be a real threat, especially in warmer climates.
$endgroup$
– Erin B
Jan 10 at 14:50
$begingroup$
This is why I never really considered a zombie apocalypse to be a real threat, especially in warmer climates.
$endgroup$
– Erin B
Jan 10 at 14:50
|
show 1 more comment
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
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I cannot give you a definite answer, but there are several aspects to consider.
A perfectly embalmed Egyptian mummy in it's tomb can exist indefinitely because it's not moved around and lacks the moisture to decompose. As soon as it's handled by people, it takes damage.
Liches move around but don't heal. Every tiny scratch and cut will eventually accumulate until there's nothing but dust left. Even the subtle movement of robes over skin will eventually wear the skin and tendons away if they cannot regenerate.
Compare the different components of a body to preserved or processed materials:
- The outer skin will wear away at the same speed as leather. Wearing clothes, handling objects and even sitting down wears it away. Within a few decades, there won't be much left of it.
- Muscles and tendons are more robust, but prone to drying out and breaking or flaking away. I don't know how fast bare muscles wear away, but once they're gone, there's nothing left connecting tendons and bones. With proper care (like rubbing them with oil to keep them smooth) I'd estimate they add a hundred years or more to the unlife of a Lich after the skin is gone. Without proper care, they're gone in no more than a decade.
- Bones are comparable to ivory but the movement of joints will eventually wear them away in a severe case of attrition. Since Liches are prone to avoiding any physical labor, they may last a few hundred years, maybe up to a thousand.
BUT: Some limbs may simply fall of if the tendons connecting them to the body decay first. The feet are probably the first to fall off because they have to carry the complete weight of the body and move (literally) with every step. If the tongue or lips decay, the Lich has serious problems speaking and pronouncing his spells correctly.
Interesting addition by Ralph Bolton:
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
And don't forget the army of skeletal minions with fly swatters keeping little corpse-eating insects at bay.
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given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
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– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
3
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I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
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– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
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Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
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– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
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@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
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– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
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This answer just keeps getting better and better.
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– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
add a comment |
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Mummification goes a long way into preserving a corpse. According to Wikipedia, some mummies are over seven thousand years old.
But let's face it. You want to go Lich because the human body sucks. Why not take it up a notch?
Mummies can only survive for millenia at chill temperatures. I believe that inside liquid nitro they could last for millions of years, maybe billions. So get your lich assets into one of these:
It's where gullible rich people store their remains in hopes of living forever. Add some tank treads and big robot arms and not only will you really live forever, you will also be a Daft Punk song made true. You can also add guns. And internet. The liquid nitrogen environment also helps in overclocking any electronics you may wish to bring along.
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+1 for the Daft Punk
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– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
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I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
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– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
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What, like, do it colder makes us older?
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– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
add a comment |
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There are a variety of preservation techniques with different results. Obviously you want to avoid ones where the body is not free to move around. Extensive wrapping, immersion, etc won't work unless the techniques are temporary.
Desiccation. Drying the body in a warm arid place will preserve it for a long time. Moving the body around after that, and exposing it to humidity, will slowly weaken it, which may give you your sweet spot of a few hundred years.
Coastal hunter-gatherers in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile and
southern Peru, known as the Chinchorro culture, were among the first
to perform artificial mummifications. Under a scenario of increasing
population size and extreme aridity (with little or no decomposition
of corpses), dead individuals may have become a significant part of
the landscape, creating the conditions for the manipulation of the
dead that led to the emergence of complex mortuary practices as early
as 5000–6000 BC. (ref)
Salt can help preserve while keeping the body from becoming too dried out (which makes it brittle).
Prior to the introduction of carbolic acid, or phenol, and later of
formaldehyde, the main preserving agents used in anatomies were
alcoholic solutions of arsenic and/or alumina salts in different
concentrations....Coleman & Kogan (1998) used almost the same
chemicals (they replaced alcohol by isopropyl alcohol), but added a
vast amount of sodium chloride. They argued that the high salt content
retained in the tissues prevented any further significant desiccation.
Salts have also been used...and 1% of anhydrous calcium chloride...and
5% of potassium nitrate. (ref)
There are multiple preserving agents and different combinations of them preserve tissue in different ways. You will want something that allows the body to move and look sort-of normal. Given that you will be using the body and exposing it to bumps and motion and stretching, plus air and humidity and maybe even rain, it will not last as long as it would in a tomb.
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add a comment |
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Have you looked into warhammer 40k's tech-priests? Although starting with a human base they can replace and augment their failing bodies with more and more technological bits (or in your case, magical) untill they can barely register as human anymore.
Also a Ship-of-theseus problem: which bit of the body is the "soul" anchored to? just the largest part? Because what happens to the bits that fall off?
You could end up with a Ebbonwood-and-silver manequin with a bare skull bolted on top.
Taking the comments below into consideration: it would vary with the degree of crazy in the particular lich. Some might tyr to live lives like they still had a normal body (and as such would wear away quite quickly amid the buzzing of meat-flies) and others might try various forms of mummification, magical preservation or the replacement of the parts that they leave behind. You could even have a lich who tries to posess 'fresh' bodies, althought that would take so much magical focus that they woudn't be nearly as powerfull anymore.
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The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
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– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
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So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
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– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
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The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
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– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
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so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
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– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
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Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
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– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
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4 Answers
4
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
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active
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I cannot give you a definite answer, but there are several aspects to consider.
A perfectly embalmed Egyptian mummy in it's tomb can exist indefinitely because it's not moved around and lacks the moisture to decompose. As soon as it's handled by people, it takes damage.
Liches move around but don't heal. Every tiny scratch and cut will eventually accumulate until there's nothing but dust left. Even the subtle movement of robes over skin will eventually wear the skin and tendons away if they cannot regenerate.
Compare the different components of a body to preserved or processed materials:
- The outer skin will wear away at the same speed as leather. Wearing clothes, handling objects and even sitting down wears it away. Within a few decades, there won't be much left of it.
- Muscles and tendons are more robust, but prone to drying out and breaking or flaking away. I don't know how fast bare muscles wear away, but once they're gone, there's nothing left connecting tendons and bones. With proper care (like rubbing them with oil to keep them smooth) I'd estimate they add a hundred years or more to the unlife of a Lich after the skin is gone. Without proper care, they're gone in no more than a decade.
- Bones are comparable to ivory but the movement of joints will eventually wear them away in a severe case of attrition. Since Liches are prone to avoiding any physical labor, they may last a few hundred years, maybe up to a thousand.
BUT: Some limbs may simply fall of if the tendons connecting them to the body decay first. The feet are probably the first to fall off because they have to carry the complete weight of the body and move (literally) with every step. If the tongue or lips decay, the Lich has serious problems speaking and pronouncing his spells correctly.
Interesting addition by Ralph Bolton:
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
And don't forget the army of skeletal minions with fly swatters keeping little corpse-eating insects at bay.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
$endgroup$
– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
3
$begingroup$
I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
$endgroup$
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
$begingroup$
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
$endgroup$
– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
$begingroup$
@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
$endgroup$
– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
$begingroup$
This answer just keeps getting better and better.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I cannot give you a definite answer, but there are several aspects to consider.
A perfectly embalmed Egyptian mummy in it's tomb can exist indefinitely because it's not moved around and lacks the moisture to decompose. As soon as it's handled by people, it takes damage.
Liches move around but don't heal. Every tiny scratch and cut will eventually accumulate until there's nothing but dust left. Even the subtle movement of robes over skin will eventually wear the skin and tendons away if they cannot regenerate.
Compare the different components of a body to preserved or processed materials:
- The outer skin will wear away at the same speed as leather. Wearing clothes, handling objects and even sitting down wears it away. Within a few decades, there won't be much left of it.
- Muscles and tendons are more robust, but prone to drying out and breaking or flaking away. I don't know how fast bare muscles wear away, but once they're gone, there's nothing left connecting tendons and bones. With proper care (like rubbing them with oil to keep them smooth) I'd estimate they add a hundred years or more to the unlife of a Lich after the skin is gone. Without proper care, they're gone in no more than a decade.
- Bones are comparable to ivory but the movement of joints will eventually wear them away in a severe case of attrition. Since Liches are prone to avoiding any physical labor, they may last a few hundred years, maybe up to a thousand.
BUT: Some limbs may simply fall of if the tendons connecting them to the body decay first. The feet are probably the first to fall off because they have to carry the complete weight of the body and move (literally) with every step. If the tongue or lips decay, the Lich has serious problems speaking and pronouncing his spells correctly.
Interesting addition by Ralph Bolton:
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
And don't forget the army of skeletal minions with fly swatters keeping little corpse-eating insects at bay.
$endgroup$
1
$begingroup$
given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
$endgroup$
– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
3
$begingroup$
I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
$endgroup$
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
$begingroup$
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
$endgroup$
– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
$begingroup$
@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
$endgroup$
– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
$begingroup$
This answer just keeps getting better and better.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I cannot give you a definite answer, but there are several aspects to consider.
A perfectly embalmed Egyptian mummy in it's tomb can exist indefinitely because it's not moved around and lacks the moisture to decompose. As soon as it's handled by people, it takes damage.
Liches move around but don't heal. Every tiny scratch and cut will eventually accumulate until there's nothing but dust left. Even the subtle movement of robes over skin will eventually wear the skin and tendons away if they cannot regenerate.
Compare the different components of a body to preserved or processed materials:
- The outer skin will wear away at the same speed as leather. Wearing clothes, handling objects and even sitting down wears it away. Within a few decades, there won't be much left of it.
- Muscles and tendons are more robust, but prone to drying out and breaking or flaking away. I don't know how fast bare muscles wear away, but once they're gone, there's nothing left connecting tendons and bones. With proper care (like rubbing them with oil to keep them smooth) I'd estimate they add a hundred years or more to the unlife of a Lich after the skin is gone. Without proper care, they're gone in no more than a decade.
- Bones are comparable to ivory but the movement of joints will eventually wear them away in a severe case of attrition. Since Liches are prone to avoiding any physical labor, they may last a few hundred years, maybe up to a thousand.
BUT: Some limbs may simply fall of if the tendons connecting them to the body decay first. The feet are probably the first to fall off because they have to carry the complete weight of the body and move (literally) with every step. If the tongue or lips decay, the Lich has serious problems speaking and pronouncing his spells correctly.
Interesting addition by Ralph Bolton:
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
And don't forget the army of skeletal minions with fly swatters keeping little corpse-eating insects at bay.
$endgroup$
I cannot give you a definite answer, but there are several aspects to consider.
A perfectly embalmed Egyptian mummy in it's tomb can exist indefinitely because it's not moved around and lacks the moisture to decompose. As soon as it's handled by people, it takes damage.
Liches move around but don't heal. Every tiny scratch and cut will eventually accumulate until there's nothing but dust left. Even the subtle movement of robes over skin will eventually wear the skin and tendons away if they cannot regenerate.
Compare the different components of a body to preserved or processed materials:
- The outer skin will wear away at the same speed as leather. Wearing clothes, handling objects and even sitting down wears it away. Within a few decades, there won't be much left of it.
- Muscles and tendons are more robust, but prone to drying out and breaking or flaking away. I don't know how fast bare muscles wear away, but once they're gone, there's nothing left connecting tendons and bones. With proper care (like rubbing them with oil to keep them smooth) I'd estimate they add a hundred years or more to the unlife of a Lich after the skin is gone. Without proper care, they're gone in no more than a decade.
- Bones are comparable to ivory but the movement of joints will eventually wear them away in a severe case of attrition. Since Liches are prone to avoiding any physical labor, they may last a few hundred years, maybe up to a thousand.
BUT: Some limbs may simply fall of if the tendons connecting them to the body decay first. The feet are probably the first to fall off because they have to carry the complete weight of the body and move (literally) with every step. If the tongue or lips decay, the Lich has serious problems speaking and pronouncing his spells correctly.
Interesting addition by Ralph Bolton:
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
And don't forget the army of skeletal minions with fly swatters keeping little corpse-eating insects at bay.
edited Jan 10 at 9:38
answered Jan 9 at 15:38
ElmyElmy
11.3k22052
11.3k22052
1
$begingroup$
given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
$endgroup$
– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
3
$begingroup$
I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
$endgroup$
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
$begingroup$
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
$endgroup$
– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
$begingroup$
@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
$endgroup$
– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
$begingroup$
This answer just keeps getting better and better.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
add a comment |
1
$begingroup$
given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
$endgroup$
– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
3
$begingroup$
I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
$endgroup$
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
$begingroup$
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
$endgroup$
– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
$begingroup$
@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
$endgroup$
– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
$begingroup$
This answer just keeps getting better and better.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
1
1
$begingroup$
given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
$endgroup$
– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
$begingroup$
given the "preserved by magic" aspect this is probably the best answer possible. tendons will give out relatively quickly so unless magic also keeps the bones in the right position 8 years is probably an over estimate.
$endgroup$
– John
Jan 9 at 15:47
3
3
$begingroup$
I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
$endgroup$
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
$begingroup$
I love this. Adds some interesting extensions to the Lich concept -- as the skin and muscles fail over time the Lich will need to burn more and more magic on a permanent basis to keep themselves functional. You need to be extremely powerful to survive as skeleton with either a glamour-esque soft body simulation, and/or a telekinetic rig holding your bony bits in place. You can also see the Liches becoming more otherworldly as they begin taking extreme action to prevent wear on their physical body, eg. levitating themselves around, telekinetically moving objects etc...
$endgroup$
– Mark_Anderson
Jan 9 at 17:35
$begingroup$
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
$endgroup$
– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
$begingroup$
Since we're magical, could the Lich use some sort of 'astral projection' to appear to be somewhere whilst his/her body remains at home? Even a Lich laying on a bed would endure some form of decay, but it would be considerably slower than walking about and generally being active. I guess some interactions with the outside world could escalate, demanding actual physical presence versus 'projected presence' too. Such requirements would have to be carefully rationed to ensure maximum longevity though.
$endgroup$
– Ralph Bolton
Jan 10 at 9:30
$begingroup$
@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
$endgroup$
– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
$begingroup$
@Mark_Anderson: If you have a telekinetic rig anyway, why bother with the bones in the first place? Why not simply traverse the world using the rig by itself? All the bones do is make you more visible and require effort to animate. Maybe nice for a fear element, but being invisible seems even better.
$endgroup$
– Flater
Jan 10 at 9:34
$begingroup$
This answer just keeps getting better and better.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
$begingroup$
This answer just keeps getting better and better.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:13
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Mummification goes a long way into preserving a corpse. According to Wikipedia, some mummies are over seven thousand years old.
But let's face it. You want to go Lich because the human body sucks. Why not take it up a notch?
Mummies can only survive for millenia at chill temperatures. I believe that inside liquid nitro they could last for millions of years, maybe billions. So get your lich assets into one of these:
It's where gullible rich people store their remains in hopes of living forever. Add some tank treads and big robot arms and not only will you really live forever, you will also be a Daft Punk song made true. You can also add guns. And internet. The liquid nitrogen environment also helps in overclocking any electronics you may wish to bring along.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
+1 for the Daft Punk
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
$begingroup$
I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
$begingroup$
What, like, do it colder makes us older?
$endgroup$
– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Mummification goes a long way into preserving a corpse. According to Wikipedia, some mummies are over seven thousand years old.
But let's face it. You want to go Lich because the human body sucks. Why not take it up a notch?
Mummies can only survive for millenia at chill temperatures. I believe that inside liquid nitro they could last for millions of years, maybe billions. So get your lich assets into one of these:
It's where gullible rich people store their remains in hopes of living forever. Add some tank treads and big robot arms and not only will you really live forever, you will also be a Daft Punk song made true. You can also add guns. And internet. The liquid nitrogen environment also helps in overclocking any electronics you may wish to bring along.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
+1 for the Daft Punk
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
$begingroup$
I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
$begingroup$
What, like, do it colder makes us older?
$endgroup$
– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Mummification goes a long way into preserving a corpse. According to Wikipedia, some mummies are over seven thousand years old.
But let's face it. You want to go Lich because the human body sucks. Why not take it up a notch?
Mummies can only survive for millenia at chill temperatures. I believe that inside liquid nitro they could last for millions of years, maybe billions. So get your lich assets into one of these:
It's where gullible rich people store their remains in hopes of living forever. Add some tank treads and big robot arms and not only will you really live forever, you will also be a Daft Punk song made true. You can also add guns. And internet. The liquid nitrogen environment also helps in overclocking any electronics you may wish to bring along.
$endgroup$
Mummification goes a long way into preserving a corpse. According to Wikipedia, some mummies are over seven thousand years old.
But let's face it. You want to go Lich because the human body sucks. Why not take it up a notch?
Mummies can only survive for millenia at chill temperatures. I believe that inside liquid nitro they could last for millions of years, maybe billions. So get your lich assets into one of these:
It's where gullible rich people store their remains in hopes of living forever. Add some tank treads and big robot arms and not only will you really live forever, you will also be a Daft Punk song made true. You can also add guns. And internet. The liquid nitrogen environment also helps in overclocking any electronics you may wish to bring along.
answered Jan 9 at 15:40
RenanRenan
46.9k12110239
46.9k12110239
$begingroup$
+1 for the Daft Punk
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
$begingroup$
I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
$begingroup$
What, like, do it colder makes us older?
$endgroup$
– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
+1 for the Daft Punk
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
$begingroup$
I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
$begingroup$
What, like, do it colder makes us older?
$endgroup$
– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
$begingroup$
+1 for the Daft Punk
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
$begingroup$
+1 for the Daft Punk
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Jan 9 at 15:53
$begingroup$
I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
$begingroup$
I'm very sad 'cause I can't upvote this twice.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:06
$begingroup$
What, like, do it colder makes us older?
$endgroup$
– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
$begingroup$
What, like, do it colder makes us older?
$endgroup$
– Broklynite
Jan 11 at 15:18
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are a variety of preservation techniques with different results. Obviously you want to avoid ones where the body is not free to move around. Extensive wrapping, immersion, etc won't work unless the techniques are temporary.
Desiccation. Drying the body in a warm arid place will preserve it for a long time. Moving the body around after that, and exposing it to humidity, will slowly weaken it, which may give you your sweet spot of a few hundred years.
Coastal hunter-gatherers in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile and
southern Peru, known as the Chinchorro culture, were among the first
to perform artificial mummifications. Under a scenario of increasing
population size and extreme aridity (with little or no decomposition
of corpses), dead individuals may have become a significant part of
the landscape, creating the conditions for the manipulation of the
dead that led to the emergence of complex mortuary practices as early
as 5000–6000 BC. (ref)
Salt can help preserve while keeping the body from becoming too dried out (which makes it brittle).
Prior to the introduction of carbolic acid, or phenol, and later of
formaldehyde, the main preserving agents used in anatomies were
alcoholic solutions of arsenic and/or alumina salts in different
concentrations....Coleman & Kogan (1998) used almost the same
chemicals (they replaced alcohol by isopropyl alcohol), but added a
vast amount of sodium chloride. They argued that the high salt content
retained in the tissues prevented any further significant desiccation.
Salts have also been used...and 1% of anhydrous calcium chloride...and
5% of potassium nitrate. (ref)
There are multiple preserving agents and different combinations of them preserve tissue in different ways. You will want something that allows the body to move and look sort-of normal. Given that you will be using the body and exposing it to bumps and motion and stretching, plus air and humidity and maybe even rain, it will not last as long as it would in a tomb.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are a variety of preservation techniques with different results. Obviously you want to avoid ones where the body is not free to move around. Extensive wrapping, immersion, etc won't work unless the techniques are temporary.
Desiccation. Drying the body in a warm arid place will preserve it for a long time. Moving the body around after that, and exposing it to humidity, will slowly weaken it, which may give you your sweet spot of a few hundred years.
Coastal hunter-gatherers in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile and
southern Peru, known as the Chinchorro culture, were among the first
to perform artificial mummifications. Under a scenario of increasing
population size and extreme aridity (with little or no decomposition
of corpses), dead individuals may have become a significant part of
the landscape, creating the conditions for the manipulation of the
dead that led to the emergence of complex mortuary practices as early
as 5000–6000 BC. (ref)
Salt can help preserve while keeping the body from becoming too dried out (which makes it brittle).
Prior to the introduction of carbolic acid, or phenol, and later of
formaldehyde, the main preserving agents used in anatomies were
alcoholic solutions of arsenic and/or alumina salts in different
concentrations....Coleman & Kogan (1998) used almost the same
chemicals (they replaced alcohol by isopropyl alcohol), but added a
vast amount of sodium chloride. They argued that the high salt content
retained in the tissues prevented any further significant desiccation.
Salts have also been used...and 1% of anhydrous calcium chloride...and
5% of potassium nitrate. (ref)
There are multiple preserving agents and different combinations of them preserve tissue in different ways. You will want something that allows the body to move and look sort-of normal. Given that you will be using the body and exposing it to bumps and motion and stretching, plus air and humidity and maybe even rain, it will not last as long as it would in a tomb.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There are a variety of preservation techniques with different results. Obviously you want to avoid ones where the body is not free to move around. Extensive wrapping, immersion, etc won't work unless the techniques are temporary.
Desiccation. Drying the body in a warm arid place will preserve it for a long time. Moving the body around after that, and exposing it to humidity, will slowly weaken it, which may give you your sweet spot of a few hundred years.
Coastal hunter-gatherers in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile and
southern Peru, known as the Chinchorro culture, were among the first
to perform artificial mummifications. Under a scenario of increasing
population size and extreme aridity (with little or no decomposition
of corpses), dead individuals may have become a significant part of
the landscape, creating the conditions for the manipulation of the
dead that led to the emergence of complex mortuary practices as early
as 5000–6000 BC. (ref)
Salt can help preserve while keeping the body from becoming too dried out (which makes it brittle).
Prior to the introduction of carbolic acid, or phenol, and later of
formaldehyde, the main preserving agents used in anatomies were
alcoholic solutions of arsenic and/or alumina salts in different
concentrations....Coleman & Kogan (1998) used almost the same
chemicals (they replaced alcohol by isopropyl alcohol), but added a
vast amount of sodium chloride. They argued that the high salt content
retained in the tissues prevented any further significant desiccation.
Salts have also been used...and 1% of anhydrous calcium chloride...and
5% of potassium nitrate. (ref)
There are multiple preserving agents and different combinations of them preserve tissue in different ways. You will want something that allows the body to move and look sort-of normal. Given that you will be using the body and exposing it to bumps and motion and stretching, plus air and humidity and maybe even rain, it will not last as long as it would in a tomb.
$endgroup$
There are a variety of preservation techniques with different results. Obviously you want to avoid ones where the body is not free to move around. Extensive wrapping, immersion, etc won't work unless the techniques are temporary.
Desiccation. Drying the body in a warm arid place will preserve it for a long time. Moving the body around after that, and exposing it to humidity, will slowly weaken it, which may give you your sweet spot of a few hundred years.
Coastal hunter-gatherers in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile and
southern Peru, known as the Chinchorro culture, were among the first
to perform artificial mummifications. Under a scenario of increasing
population size and extreme aridity (with little or no decomposition
of corpses), dead individuals may have become a significant part of
the landscape, creating the conditions for the manipulation of the
dead that led to the emergence of complex mortuary practices as early
as 5000–6000 BC. (ref)
Salt can help preserve while keeping the body from becoming too dried out (which makes it brittle).
Prior to the introduction of carbolic acid, or phenol, and later of
formaldehyde, the main preserving agents used in anatomies were
alcoholic solutions of arsenic and/or alumina salts in different
concentrations....Coleman & Kogan (1998) used almost the same
chemicals (they replaced alcohol by isopropyl alcohol), but added a
vast amount of sodium chloride. They argued that the high salt content
retained in the tissues prevented any further significant desiccation.
Salts have also been used...and 1% of anhydrous calcium chloride...and
5% of potassium nitrate. (ref)
There are multiple preserving agents and different combinations of them preserve tissue in different ways. You will want something that allows the body to move and look sort-of normal. Given that you will be using the body and exposing it to bumps and motion and stretching, plus air and humidity and maybe even rain, it will not last as long as it would in a tomb.
answered Jan 9 at 17:32
CynCyn
6,13411035
6,13411035
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Have you looked into warhammer 40k's tech-priests? Although starting with a human base they can replace and augment their failing bodies with more and more technological bits (or in your case, magical) untill they can barely register as human anymore.
Also a Ship-of-theseus problem: which bit of the body is the "soul" anchored to? just the largest part? Because what happens to the bits that fall off?
You could end up with a Ebbonwood-and-silver manequin with a bare skull bolted on top.
Taking the comments below into consideration: it would vary with the degree of crazy in the particular lich. Some might tyr to live lives like they still had a normal body (and as such would wear away quite quickly amid the buzzing of meat-flies) and others might try various forms of mummification, magical preservation or the replacement of the parts that they leave behind. You could even have a lich who tries to posess 'fresh' bodies, althought that would take so much magical focus that they woudn't be nearly as powerfull anymore.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
$begingroup$
So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
$begingroup$
The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
$begingroup$
so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
$begingroup$
Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
$begingroup$
Have you looked into warhammer 40k's tech-priests? Although starting with a human base they can replace and augment their failing bodies with more and more technological bits (or in your case, magical) untill they can barely register as human anymore.
Also a Ship-of-theseus problem: which bit of the body is the "soul" anchored to? just the largest part? Because what happens to the bits that fall off?
You could end up with a Ebbonwood-and-silver manequin with a bare skull bolted on top.
Taking the comments below into consideration: it would vary with the degree of crazy in the particular lich. Some might tyr to live lives like they still had a normal body (and as such would wear away quite quickly amid the buzzing of meat-flies) and others might try various forms of mummification, magical preservation or the replacement of the parts that they leave behind. You could even have a lich who tries to posess 'fresh' bodies, althought that would take so much magical focus that they woudn't be nearly as powerfull anymore.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
$begingroup$
So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
$begingroup$
The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
$begingroup$
so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
$begingroup$
Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
$begingroup$
Have you looked into warhammer 40k's tech-priests? Although starting with a human base they can replace and augment their failing bodies with more and more technological bits (or in your case, magical) untill they can barely register as human anymore.
Also a Ship-of-theseus problem: which bit of the body is the "soul" anchored to? just the largest part? Because what happens to the bits that fall off?
You could end up with a Ebbonwood-and-silver manequin with a bare skull bolted on top.
Taking the comments below into consideration: it would vary with the degree of crazy in the particular lich. Some might tyr to live lives like they still had a normal body (and as such would wear away quite quickly amid the buzzing of meat-flies) and others might try various forms of mummification, magical preservation or the replacement of the parts that they leave behind. You could even have a lich who tries to posess 'fresh' bodies, althought that would take so much magical focus that they woudn't be nearly as powerfull anymore.
$endgroup$
Have you looked into warhammer 40k's tech-priests? Although starting with a human base they can replace and augment their failing bodies with more and more technological bits (or in your case, magical) untill they can barely register as human anymore.
Also a Ship-of-theseus problem: which bit of the body is the "soul" anchored to? just the largest part? Because what happens to the bits that fall off?
You could end up with a Ebbonwood-and-silver manequin with a bare skull bolted on top.
Taking the comments below into consideration: it would vary with the degree of crazy in the particular lich. Some might tyr to live lives like they still had a normal body (and as such would wear away quite quickly amid the buzzing of meat-flies) and others might try various forms of mummification, magical preservation or the replacement of the parts that they leave behind. You could even have a lich who tries to posess 'fresh' bodies, althought that would take so much magical focus that they woudn't be nearly as powerfull anymore.
edited Jan 10 at 12:21
answered Jan 10 at 10:01
BorghBorgh
1,089413
1,089413
$begingroup$
The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
$begingroup$
So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
$begingroup$
The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
$begingroup$
so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
$begingroup$
Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
$begingroup$
The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
$begingroup$
So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
$begingroup$
The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
$begingroup$
so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
$begingroup$
Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
$begingroup$
The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
$begingroup$
The soul is attached to a trinket - like a bracelet or a necklace. This is actually the dividing point between a Lich and a mage. Life extending spells are a thing, but they can only give you like a 10 year bonus. Becoming a Lich gives you centuries - but, as I said, it's a gruesome process and not everyone can do it.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:19
$begingroup$
So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
$begingroup$
So why would they need the body? Just sentimental reasons? because if that is the case i'd ditch mine first opportunity.
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:20
$begingroup$
The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
$begingroup$
The soul can't be transferred to another body, no matter how powerful he gets. I've placed this fundamental constraint in this world to prevent them from being immortal (it would kind of screw my story). The fate of a Lich is, eventually, becoming an inanimate object for the rest of eternity, since he can only die if the trinket is destroyed.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:26
$begingroup$
so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
$begingroup$
so they do need the body and my question stands: which part of the body? A lich who gets his body caught in a sawmill accident and is now the proud owner of a pile of kindling: what bits does he need and which bits can he leave?
$endgroup$
– Borgh
Jan 10 at 11:29
$begingroup$
Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
$begingroup$
Well... To be honest, I haven't thought about that. The concept is that his soul needs a physical presence. So, if you're asking me if an arm could be a Lich... well... yes, it can. I just prefer to picture them as badass skeleton mages.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 10 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
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6
$begingroup$
Are the lich's bodies up and moving around, or do they just need to preserve their body in a closet somewhere in order to keep some sort of spiritual/magical life going? I.e., do they need to worry about arms falling off when they pull open a door or feet slowly grinding away when they walk?
$endgroup$
– Giter
Jan 9 at 15:38
4
$begingroup$
They will use the bodies. As muscles and tissue vanish (or fall off), he will use magic as "crutches" to keep whatever is left in place.
$endgroup$
– Magus
Jan 9 at 17:01
3
$begingroup$
So the bones will be the last thing to go, so I would say look at how bones decay... fleshy soft bits decay pretty quickly, given environmental conditions (is it humid? Pretty fast. Is it arid... well, we have pharaoh corpses that still have their skin... it's just drier and brittle).
$endgroup$
– hszmv
Jan 9 at 17:23
$begingroup$
Indefinitely, minus the half-life of all its atoms.
$endgroup$
– Mazura
Jan 9 at 20:48
2
$begingroup$
This is why I never really considered a zombie apocalypse to be a real threat, especially in warmer climates.
$endgroup$
– Erin B
Jan 10 at 14:50