A body in a sealed coffin would undergo different stages of decomposition depending on the duration of burial. After 2 years, the body would likely be in the early stages of decomposition, with some soft tissue breakdown and possible mummification if the environment is dry. After 4 years, more significant decomposition would occur, with the body losing most soft tissue, while bones would begin to be exposed. After 10 years, the remains would primarily consist of bones, and any remaining organic material would be minimal, depending on the coffin's materials and environmental conditions.
What u think it wil look like
Which Highwayman? There were hundreds over the years.
Nothing the world will be exspolded
It is impossible to tell what humans will look like in a billion years, if any humans are even alive then. We could change drastically, or not at all.
I saw on a show that a body buried in the 60's when it was exumed it look like it was the day they were buried.
A body that has been embalmed will look exactly the same as it looked when it was buried for about 100 years or more; if its not embalmed it will be decomposed.
Fossils that are buried millions of years ago do not look exactly like a modern-day organism due to evolution. This process refers to the gradual change in organisms over a period of time.
The heat and the dryness of the desert that they buried the body in. They only buried the body in a shallow pit in the desert, so they knew where to look when time was up.
evolution occurred
It depends on your geneic makeup.
After a body is buried for a year, it typically undergoes significant decomposition. The soft tissues and organs decompose relatively quickly, leading to a skeletalization process where only bones remain. Factors such as burial depth, soil type, and environmental conditions can influence the rate of decomposition.
His Body Face Reconstructment His Body Face Reconstructmentull have to dearch it on google imagesHere is a website:http://elliottback.com/wp/what-did-king-tut-look-like/To see what Tutankhamun looked like more than 3000 years ago, look at the related links.
All I know is it was black.
Depending on whether it was embalmed, there may be some tissue left on the bones. It won't look as nice as the day they died, but there would be tissue assuming the body was properly embalmed. If the body was not embalmed, there would be nothing left but bones and, if high enough quality material and buried in traditional fashions, the clothing it was last wearing.
Nothing sexual reproduces perfectly ... a side effect of evolution. The "fossils" of single celled organisms can look exactly the same, even over a billion years.
Like a normal penis, before he was buried. Now it is covered with mold.