• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Towers Of Silence: Why Humans Have Fed The Dead To Vultures For Over 3,000 Years

October 31, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Humans have been burying their dead for millennia, but it’s not the only way we’ve utilized nature to help us transform corpses. In Tibet, birds of prey play a pivotal role in Sky Burials, and elsewhere, Zoroastrian tradition saw the erection of Towers Of Silence, a place where corpses are arranged so that carnivorous birds can feed on them.

The funerary practice is seen as a way of purifying the body, as without it, a corpse is vulnerable to contamination by demons or evil spirits. To stop that from happening, the dead were taken to towers known as dakhmas so that they could be exposed to the elements and winged scavengers.

Advertisement

You might imagine it to be a messy, lengthy process, but a study using donated human remains at the Forensic Anthropology Research Facility in Texas has shown how vultures can largely skeletonize a corpse in just five hours. Five! In a coffin, you’re looking at closer to five years for the same results, so those birds really know what they’re doing.

Like Sky Burials, Towers Of Silence avoided the negative consequences of modern day burials that have taken up around 1 million acres (404,685 hectares) of land in America, with the production of caskets destroying roughly 4 million acres (1.6 million hectares) of forest annually. Many of those bodies go down having been embalmed, committing around 800,000 gallons of embalming fluid to the ground, which can leach into the soil as a contaminant.

There was a time you could find active Towers Of Silence in several places across the globe, with The Guardian reporting that the practice dates back at least 3,000 years. For orthodox Zoroastrians, the idea of burial is so abhorrent that it was reportedly considered a form of punishment for the wicked. This is because it created an obstacle that prevented the soul from ascending to heaven, leaving it doomed to spend eternity in the underworld.

Zoroastrian communities (whose members are known as Parsis) still exist today but the number of dakhmas has dropped significantly as the practice has been outlawed in parts of the world. Even in places where they are still legal, the Towers Of Silence are struggling due to a fall in the number of vultures.

Advertisement

“Because of the rapid growth of metropolitan Karachi, the daḵma, once on the edge of town, is surrounded by densely populated neighborhoods, and there have been no vultures for 25 years,” explains Encylopaedia Iranica. “The bodies dry quickly in the hot sun of Sindh but are not stripped of their skin and have crowded the daḵma, whose pit cannot handle their bodies.”

The practice might seem shocking to Westerners where burial has always been the norm, but it could be argued that dakhmas are better for the planet, and carry a comforting final act of charity as the flesh feeds the vultures that assist the soul’s transition to heaven. On a planet where the population has tipped 8 billion, perhaps it’s time to start taking ecologically sound funerary practices more seriously, and on that note, have you heard about human composting?

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Exclusive-Aerospace firms warn of snags over U.S. engine rule delays
  2. G7 finance ministers make some progress on tax deal, UK says
  3. Artemis May Not Launch Until October After Second Attempt Scrubbed
  4. New Record Set With 17 People In Earth Orbit At The Same Time

Source Link: Towers Of Silence: Why Humans Have Fed The Dead To Vultures For Over 3,000 Years

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • A Giant Volcano Off The Coast Of Oregon Failed To Erupt On Time. Its New Schedule: 2026
  • Here Are 5 Ways In Which Cancer Treatment Advanced In 2025
  • The First Marine Mammal Driven To Extinction By Humans Disappeared Only 27 Years After Being Discovered
  • The Planet’s Oldest Bee Species Has Become The World’s First Insect To Be Granted Legal Rights
  • Facial Disfiguration: Why Has The Face Been The Target Of Punishment Across Time?
  • The World’s Largest Living Reptile Can “Surf” Over 10 Kilometers To Get Between Islands
  • In 1962, A Geologist Went Into A Cave. 2 Months Later, He’d Accidentally Invented A New Field Of Biology.
  • The Ancient Remains Of A 3-Ton Shark Indicate A New Point Of Origin For Gigantic Lamniform Sharks
  • The Biggest Landslide In Recorded History Happened Quite Recently And Pretty Close To Home
  • Meet The Amami Rabbit, A Goth Bunny That’s Also A Living Fossil
  • The Largest Native Terrestrial Animal In Antarctica Is Both Smaller And Tougher Than You’d Expect
  • The Freaky Reason Why You Should Never Store Tomatoes And Potatoes Together
  • Hominin Vs. Hominid: What’s The Difference?
  • Experimental Alzheimer’s Drug Could Have The Power To Halt Disease Before Symptoms Even Start
  • Al Naslaa: What Made This Enormous Boulder In Saudi Arabia Split In Two? Nobody’s Quite Sure
  • The Amazon Is Entering A “Hypertropical” Climate For The First Time In 10 Million Years
  • What Scientists Saw When They Peered Inside 190-Million-Year-Old Eggs And Recreated Some Of The World’s Oldest Dinosaur Embryos
  • Is 1 Dog Year Really The Same As 7 Human Years?
  • Were Dinosaur Eggs Soft Like A Reptile’s, Or Hard Like A Bird’s?
  • What Causes All The Symptoms Of Long COVID And ME/CFS? The Brainstem Could Be The Key
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2026 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version