Callafangers wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 9:58 pm
it is safe to say we are looking
at least around a figure of 350-450 kg per corpse for 'Holocausted' Jews, on average.
Mattogno did his own combustion experiments which came out to 3.5 kg/kg.
His speculation (“there’s no reason”) is flawed and nonsensical, in fact I have presented many facts demonstrating the exact opposite. In conclusion, his claim that at Bełżec, Sobibór and Treblinka there existed “the possibility of a lower ratio” than the one resulting from Lothes’s and Profé’s experiments (0.56 : 1) is without foundation, and therefore he has not even made any dents on my arguments in favor of a 3.5 : 1 wood/corpse ratio.
I'm gonna take this over your numbers. This comes out to 175 kg of dry wood per body. I'm going to go with that, since Mattogno has put work into it then you, and conducted his own burning experiments, which you haven't. This is without flammables, which bring that ratio down, and without assuming total destruction of the corpses. Based on these factors, going w Mattogno's estimates, we might reasonably project 100 kg per body. But let's use Mattogno's 175 number.
Assuming 3,000,000 Jews burned solely w wood (this violates witness testimony) that would come out to 3 mil x 175 kg
AI
Give me calculations for five hundred twenty-five million kg of dry wood to cubic meters
Let me calculate this using the standard density for dry wood, which is typically around 500 kg/m³.
Calculation:
Volume (m³) = Mass (kg) ÷ Density (kg/m³)
Volume = 525,000,000 ÷ 500
Volume = 1,050,000 cubic meters
I find in this link that in terms of modern Germany timber production
https://www.destatis.de/EN/Themes/Econo ... _node.html
Timber logged remaining at high level - 78.7 million cubic metres in 2022
In 2022, a total of 78.7 million cubic metres of timber was logged in German forests. The amount of timber logged dropped by 5.1% from the record high of 83.0 million cubic metres seen in 2021, according to the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis)
In ww2 Germany had access to not only their forests, but vast Polish and USSR forests. They also had millions of slave laborers who could essentially work for free, so it seems like they could match this production, or exceed it.
Therefore, even using Mattogno's experimental results, and accounting for no use of liquid flammables and partial corpse destruction, the amount of wood required would equal per year of corpse destruction would equal about 1/160th of annual production, over the two years of corpse destruction this way.
You are saying this is impossible?