After reading about efforts to find housing for the Grenfell Tower residents and how some have been moved around from place to place, I'm hard pressed to understand exactly how the government is now going to find housing for 800 additional residents.
Warning! The following is mildly graphic!
Anyway, something that also left me scratching my head was statements that some of the victims may never be identified (or even located!) because of the intensity of the fire and also the report that "every complete body has been removed." I found some information that may apply in this case from a
website that explained that "The devastating fire that struck a high-rise tower in London may have been so powerful that it destroyed much of the DNA evidence needed to identify its victims."
Cremation temperatures range around 1400 degrees F so if that's true then the fire was incredibly hot. Looking at the interior photos, in particular the ones showing bathrooms I noticed that many copper and brass fittings, which melt at even
higher temperatures appear to be missing. Pipes that I assume are made of iron were not melted. So is it possible the fire burned at that intensity? I'm curious because I read that high rise fires typically burn at about 1,000 to 1200 degrees F.
This is all conjecture on my part as a non-professional so please take my speculation and questions with a grain of salt. I could just be overthinking and none of this may have any bearing on the fire.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4633414/Police-fear-Grenfell-victims-never-identified.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...12026319da7_story.html?utm_term=.25e82eed90f6
https://www.forensicmag.com/news/20...dna-needed-id-victims?cmpid=horizontalcontent
https://skysaver.com/blog/how-hot-is-fire/