>>21229 pb
What are the odds the "blue" gravel is actually bone ashes/fragments?
>>21229 pb
What are the odds the "blue" gravel is actually bone ashes/fragments?
you were there?
A combination of oyster shell and bone fragments could serve as road base and go undetected as human remains. Oyster shell is a common material used on tropical island roads.
Shark food could easily miss portions of the remains and cause investigations. Additionally water with that color is not a shark friendly environment. >>22050
Researcher looks for new ways to repel sharks
"He and his team tested other substances, and they found that some non-magnetic metals also interfere with a sharkโs electrical sensors. Particularly effective are rare-earth metals like samarium, neodymium, and praseodymium."
https://www.pri.org/stories/2012-04-06/researcher-looks-new-ways-repel-sharks
I don't pull this shit out of my ass.
Saying that tossing thousands of bodies to sharks or barracudas is too risky. But hey, keep on promoting a stupid method of disposal when a real one is poised to expose a process.