gotta love Fairbanks, I don't think it dropped below freezing last night!
Fiver
6:00 pm on May 10, 2004 (gmt 0)
I always wondered what those little brick houses were in the cemeteries - growing up in Canada - I always thought they were rich people with expensive burial plots... but its just where they store the bodies till the spring thaw.
I'm about 20 minutes north of the U.S. Border, so I'm sure it's a similar scene in northern NY state.
I wonder how far south you need to go before the ground stops freezing.
volatilegx
9:21 pm on May 10, 2004 (gmt 0)
Here they just bury people 1 foot below the surface and lay a concrete or granite slab on top of the grave. Maybe they could try something like that in AK.
pmac
12:10 am on May 11, 2004 (gmt 0)
--brick houses were in the cemeteries-------
Who would have thought?
Here I was thinking it was the mens room.
mivox
4:13 am on May 11, 2004 (gmt 0)
Gads... They ran a big story in the local paper about it today. Apparently all the 'hold-overs' get buried this month... pleasant thought. ;)
olwen
8:46 am on May 11, 2004 (gmt 0)
There's a cemetery an Whakarewrew in Rotorua (NZ) in a thermal area where graves are built on the ground rather than dug in [flippi.co.nz...]
Skylo
10:46 am on May 11, 2004 (gmt 0)
Now thats messed up
hannamyluv
12:55 pm on May 11, 2004 (gmt 0)
That's what the do in New Orleans. Gound's too swampy to bury people in it. It's much prettier though than the example above.