What is Cremation?
Reprinted with Permission from CANA, Cremation
Association of North America, October 2001.
Many people think of cremation as a burning of
the body which results in ashes. In actuality, cremation is a process
of extreme dehydration and evaporation created with intense heat
and flame which reduces the composition of the body to bone fragments.
These fragments are then further processed into a powdery substance
called cremated remains.
Cremation takes place in a chamber called a retort.
Each retort is only large enough to hold one cremation containter
at one time. The cremation container is placed in the retort which
is then heated to a temperature of 1600 degrees farenheit. This
high level of heat produces the state of extreme dehydration and
evaporation which causes the composition of the body to be reduced
to bone fragments. This is the first step in the cremation process
and takes approximately two hours.
After the cooling period, the cremated remains
are removed from the retort. Any non-combustible materials, such
as metal, which could not be reduced during cremation, are separated
and removed. The bone fragments are then mechanically processed
into fine particles. Cremated remains for the average adult weigh
from four to eight pounds.
The cremated remains are then placed in an urn
or temporary container, depending on the family's plans. The total
time necessary for the entire cremation process in approximately
five hours. Cremation is a strictly controlled process which takes
place in carefully maintained facilities using procedural checkpoints
which guard the dignity and individuality of each person.
|