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For one thing, there is very little evidence that most other animals have any sort of reverence for the dead.
I mean... Vultures and other carrion creatures revere the dead, in their own special ways.
/j
I could see how one voor find it enjoyable that their skull would be cherished by another human being.
A guy I knew had a skull from the Roman era, that had a hole in it from a ballista arrow. Not the best way to go, but how cool is it that your head can amaze people two thousand years from now
There's no way that wasn't a replica. How is that skull not in a museum or something?
It looked convincing enough, but we were quite young back then. The thing that always stuck with me that the hole in the skull was square shaped. It was only untill later that I learned that ballistae arrows did indeed have square arrowheads.
But it coud've been a replica, though I'm unsure where one would source one in a manner that wasn't somehow more dubious than having a real one. (The guy was a historian of sorts). Then again, where I live the Roman history isn't too far away.
People are saying that that website is selling skulls for 2000-3000$. A roman solider skull Would be a lot more expensive than that, I imagine. Given the age and the historical relevance. So that's two things to be amazed by when looking at that thing, I think.
If I were him, I'd definitely not mind that fate.
Probably not what you were thinking but there's plenty of stories of dogs not leaving their owners after death like Greyfriars bobby.
Also elephants are known for mourning their dead.
I think if I donated my body to science and they were all done with it, and they could make more money for research by selling bits off to weirdos that would be fine by me. Maybe put a little QR code on it that people could scan and get a little biography of me. That would probably make archeology a lot easier.