Science is constantly advancing. Humans have made many inventions with the help of science, but it seems impossible to bring someone back to life after death.
But now an Australian company claims to make people alive even after death. For this, the company is burying the body in snow. A cryonics company has buried its first customer in ice. The company hopes to be able to revive it in the future.
According to a report, the headquarters of the Australian company Southern Cryonics is in Sydney and they have established their high-tech center in Holbrook, which is about 500 km away from there. The company claims to bury human corpses at minus 200 degrees Celsius and after that, it is said that in the future, if science advances so much that can bring people alive even after death, these corpses will be taken out and brought back to life.
Southern Cryonics has announced that it will operate the first cryonics facility in the Southern Hemisphere. It has cryogenically frozen its first customer at the Holbrook facility. An 80-year-old dead man has been kept at minus 200 degrees Celsius in Sydney.
Phillip Rhodes, facility manager for Southern Cryonics, said it was very stressful. Rhodes said that although his firm is ready to accept cadavers this year, his first client was a bit special. He said his family suddenly called and we had about a week to prepare. His team tested all the cryonics equipment and the team was almost completely ready.
According to media reports, the first patient died on May 12 in a hospital in Sydney. A 10-hour process to save his body began immediately in hopes of reviving him. The man’s body was taken to the cold room of the hospital and covered with ice and brought to six degrees Celsius. The doctors then helped to protect the cells and lower the body temperature. Fluid is pumped into the body, which acts as a kind of anti-freeze.
Australian Company Southern Cryonics Claims to Revive the Dead Using Cryogenics
After this, the patient was wrapped in a special type of sleeping bag and packed in dry ice. His body temperature was brought down to minus 80 degrees Celsius and the next day he was taken to Southern Cryonics’ Holbrook facility, where he was kept on dry ice until liquid nitrogen arrived. The person’s temperature was then lowered to minus 200 degrees Celsius and then he was placed in a special tank that served as a vacuum storage pod.
According to the report, it is said that the customer spent 170 thousand dollars for the entire process.
It is said that there is an additional charge for medical teams to help with the preservation process. The company says the 10-hour process is designed to increase a person’s chances of recovery.
The Holbrook facility can currently hold four bodies. The Holbrook site can hold a maximum of 40 bodies. There is a possibility to increase it further.

















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