41. Can bodies be burned in pits?
Which is it: heat, or oxygen?
Regardless of what Holocaust-deniers wish to be the case, the simple
fact is that such burning did take place; there is
a famous
photograph of pit-burning, in fact, which was smuggled out of
Auschwitz-Birkenau.
In addition, there is the report quoted in Hugo
Erichsen's 1887 work Cremation of the Dead which documents
the cremation of over 200 bodies within an hour. The bodies were not
"totally consumed," -- a phrase of value only as a straw man
with respect to the burning of bodies in pits during the Holocaust.
The report of the archeological investigations at Belzec
includes gruesome findings, including layers of blackened human fat,
found in some of the 33 mass graves discovered during the investigation:
"The drill core brought to the surface putrid
pieces of human remains, including pieces of skull with skin and
tufts of hair still attached, and unidentifiable lumps of greyish,
fatty human tissue. The bottom of the grave was lined with a layer
of evil smelling black (i.e. burnt) human fat, resembling black
soap."