Archie wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 6:22 am
The Katyn graves had about 8.7 bodies per square meter.
What is the body count per cubic meter? Remember we are trying to establish something of a minimum. I thought 1 body per cubic meter (which would correspond 20,000 over Kola's entire described space) would be very low. Area doesn't really apply here because the graves can be of variable depth. I don't know why you would use this metric in your argument, when volume is what really matters.
Nevertheless if you want to go with a few tens of thousands as your estimate for deaths there, we can move on. I suppose they could have died on the trains and then were moved over to the graves upon arrival, this would dovetail with witness testimony about mass death on the trains.
At Auschwitz in 1942, they buried bodies because of inadequate cremation capacity and those bodies were later disinterred and burned. It seems the preference was, where possible, to cremate bodies ASAP, but in instances where this could not be done they buried them (this happened periodically at many camps). And Auschwitz is an example that comes to mind where the bodies were later burned.
Ohrdruf is another example.
I don't know what you're talking about in Auschwitz, please provide evidence of this "buried bodies because of inadequate cremation capacity were later disinterred and burned."
At Ohrdurf, from my brief research, the body destruction happened in the waning days of the war, as SS fled and was attempting to cover up events at the camp. It's important to interrogate the reasons for this for exhumation and body destruction. You're appealing to "norms" of some sort, but actually they seem related to cover up efforts.