Hi, all. I've been away for awhile and am catching up--glad to be in such fine company again and hoping for good fruit as a result of your dedication. Re the unresolved question of the only found remains, I'd like to offer this theory again: that those items were not planted but fell off of a body, the decomposition of which was greatly accelerated by LIME heaped around the body to hide it from sight and scent; undiscoverable and, eventually, desiccated. Did something go wrong when he revisited the site? Did he see it steaming & smoldering? Because, as I understand it, lime does that with animal flesh, when it meets moisture...He was a gardener would very likely have used lime to amend the soil, knew where to get it, could easily find out its preservative qualities on line, as I did, but not know what it does to a body when wetted. Interestingly, a site on the preservative qualities of lime showed photos demonstrating a pig in lime, chemically preserved and microbe-free. But, another site described (with caution) what happens when water or humidity is introduced. Then, it preserves by intense heat. This is the only way I can think possible to render a clean, "defleshed" set of items in just a few days, as those found at the site were....Further, someone mentioned again that his hands had burns. I would like to know how they are described and when they were seen. I can't remember and I want to know if the timing would support the lime theory. Also, a simple experiment can be done to test the theory. Thanks all of you.
[Please bear with my lack of citation; I no longer have the IPad I used to save and note these sources. Sadly, it bit the dust taking everything with it]