What “Images” are left of Hiroshima?

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At the beginning of this year, we were surprised to learn that people (wrongly) believed that the stone bodies of Pompeii were real, and of ancient origin. In fact, these are exact pictures of the bodies of people taken in the explosion of 79 AD, but in fact they were made by pouring the skin of Paris in the shape of a body.

“The material from the volcano covered the bodies of the dead, forming hard and solid layers around them,” said Mary Beard, Professor of Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, in an article for BBC Magazine. “As the flesh, internal organs and clothing decayed, a space was left – this is exactly what a dead body looks like at the time of death. It didn’t take long for a spark to see that if you poured plaster of paris into that void, you would get a window that looked like an exact image of the body.”

It has come to our attention that people are a bit confused about the photos that were found and preserved in Hiroshima after the US dropped an atomic bomb on the city on August 6, 1945. According to comments by Yoshinori Obayashi, a volunteer who explains exhibits at the Atomic Bomb Museum, museum visitors sometimes believe the people quickly disappeared in the nuclear explosion, and only shadows remained.

Although it is understood that these stories arose, and many thousands were revealed missing and presumed dead in the months following the attack, the “images” left in Hiroshima were not the steaming remains of the people killed in the atomic attack. First, it takes a lot of energy to scare people.

“We don’t know how deep the heat rays go into the body,” said Dr Minako Otani, professor of medicine at Hiroshima University in Japan. Measure of Peace“but even if the human body is burned, the carbonized tissue or at least the bones will remain.”

Pictures of people and other things, included bicycle, they don’t have steam left. As the atomic bomb poured its energy over Hiroshima, he encountered objects in his path. These things – people, animals, or inanimate objects – absorbed this energy, but the energy of the bomb continued to infect the surrounding area. The result looks like a shadow, but it is actually the surrounding area that has been painted.

Efforts have been made to preserve these symbols. An display at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum titled “Human Shadow Etched in Stone” these stone steps are shown, pictured above, where someone chose to sit on August 6, 1945, and was apparently killed immediately . Their identity remains unknown to this day.

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