indicates we will increasingly not have a marker to rely on for genealogical evidence.
- Relatively few people are cremated in the US by international standards - the figure currently stands at 40%, though the trend is upwards and there are some big geographical variations.
- Recent figures show Hawaii and Nevada up near 70%, but Mississippi at less than 10%. That could be a mark of socio-economic status. Statistics tend to show poorer people prefer in-ground burials
- In Holland, some 57% of all bodies are cremated.
- Britain is the biggest cremator in Europe with 73%.
- Since the Catholic church eased its opposition to cremation, (there has been) growth in places such as Italy and Spain.
- A traditional burial can cost four times as much as cremation. And regarding space, one survey showed 750 burials taking up an acre of ground.
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