10 Bone-Chilling Things You Never Knew About Skeletons

by Johan Tobias

Every day when you wake up and start walking around you’re carrying a skeleton with you. That’s just as bad as being stalked by a vampire. That creepy, bony guy is right under your skin 24/7. You might not be giving a second thought to your skeleton in your day-to-day life unless maybe you have some bone injuries now and then, but there’s a lot to know about your skeleton, or skeletons in general, that could make you want to jump right out of your skin.

10. Your Skeleton is Replaced Every 10 Years or So

Your body seems like a very permanent thing because it’s you. It’s not like your body goes anywhere without you. But, in a technical sense, you’re actually recycling your body all the time. Your cells die and are replaced constantly to the point that who you are today is not who you were a year ago, at least in terms of the cells and atoms that make you up. Your skeleton is no different.

Even though a skeleton seems like a pretty solid, stationary, and permanent aspect of yourself, it’s not. The cells in your bones get replaced just like everything else. Over a decade you will have replaced pretty much every bit of your skeleton with new cells.

The bones of your skeleton reach their peak mass when you are in your twenties. From then on, a process called remodeling takes place which sees your cells swapped again and again, turning you into a skeletal Ship of Theseus.

9. Tons of Movies Have Used Real Skeletons as Props

In your real life, there is a good chance you will never see an actual skeleton in person. Most of us rarely ever even see a dead body, and if we do it’s probably a loved one and we’re viewing them at a funeral shortly after they died. 

There’s very little reason or opportunity for the average person to see the skeletal remains of a human.  But that’s just in person. You have probably seen a real skeleton before, even if you didn’t realize it.

There’s very little reason or opportunity for the average person to see the skeletal remains of a human.  But that’s just in person. there’s a good chance you have seen a real skeleton before, even if you didn’t realize it.

Skeletons in movies are about a dime a dozen. All kinds of films have made use of skeletons, not just horror movies. And while you might think a special effects person could simply whip up a fake skeleton to get the job done on a movie set, it’s often easier just to buy a skeleton that already exists. For quite a long time, those skeletons were actually real skeletons.

Films like the original Poltergeist, The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, and the Rocky Horror Picture Show all feature real human skeletons as props. Maybe not everyone knew it at the time, but they were. Even the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland was made using real human skeletons. 

The skeletons in the movie Poltergeist were used in a pool scene. Everyone on set assumed that they were props at first until they found out it’s cheaper just to buy a human skeleton from a medical supply company than to make one out of plastic.

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In the movie The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, the villain finds a skeleton in a coffin at one point which was also genuine human remains. It was the skeleton of an actress whose wish was to continue acting even in death. 

8. There’s a Lake in the Himalayan Mountains That’s Full of Skeletons

A lake with a dead body in it is foreboding. A lake that’s full of skeletons is the basis for a horror movie. Nonetheless, there’s an infamous lake in the Himalayan mountains where hundreds of skeletal remains were discovered. 

In 1942 it was discovered that somewhere between 300 and 800 corpses were in and around this frozen lake, high in the mountains. The lake is about 5,000 m above sea level and is days from the nearest town. 

For years it was believed that the skeletal remains were of pilgrims who probably got caught in the storm. There were no weapons and no sign they had been attacked, anyway. However, genetic testing in 2019 showed that the skeletal remains belong to three different groups of people who died in three different time periods and had diverse origins far from the Himalayas. Rather than solving a mystery, the information made it even more confusing.

7. There Are No Skeletons of the Titanic Victims 

The story of the Titanic is something that has fascinated people since the day the ship sank. Obviously, James Cameron helped build the mystique with his movie, and subsequent efforts to find the wreckage of the ship also helped capture people’s imaginations. And then, of course, there was the ill-fated submarine trip in 2023 that never made it to its destination.

One thing we do know about the wreck of the Titanic is that there are no bodies to recover. Nothing remains of the victims of the Titanic including their skeletons which have long since dissolved away. 

Below a depth of 3,000 feet in the ocean, you’ll pass something called the calcium carbonate compensation depth. At this level and below, bones can’t hold together long and they will dissolve. Even if some bodies were trapped in rooms with oxygenated water, after more than a century it’s unlikely any identifiable remains could ever be found. 

6. Museums House the Skeletal Remains of Over Half a Million Native Americans

If you go to almost any natural history museum in America, you’re probably going to find the skeletal remains of a few people. Sometimes these are mummies, sometimes they are the remains of ancient humans that were discovered in caves or bogs or who knows where. 

On a case-by-case basis, these can seem very curious, interesting, or even educational. But if you step back and look at the big picture, it becomes something much darker.

If we’re dealing with ancient skeletons from North America, chances are you’re talking about Native Americans. And if every museum has a few of these skeletons on display or in storage, then those numbers quickly add up. If you’re wondering what they add up to, someone has done a bit of math to give you a rough idea. It’s believed that the remains of over half a million Native Americans are currently in museums. 

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Try to imagine anyone in the modern world taking the bodies of your ancestors, maybe your grandparents or great-grandparents, and putting them on display.  Now imagine they did that for the entire city of Sacramento which has a population of about 528,000.

5. Europeans Used to Cover Skeletons in Gold and Jewels and Display Them

The Catholic Church differs from many other Christian churches in particular because of its focus on saints. Whereas many Christians would only pray to god, Catholics had prayers for specific Saints to supposedly help watch over them or guide them as it related to specific issues. Saint Amand is the saint of bartenders, for instance. Saint Christopher is one of the saints of travelers. But some Catholics in some places also devised catacomb saints.

A catacomb saint is basically a skeleton that has been covered in gold and jewels. They would be stationed in small churches and revered as local protectors. For years and years, these golden crested skeletons might watch over a congregation, grinning jewel-encrusted smiles from the wall.

Many of the skeletons, which still exist in parts of Northern Europe, were Roman martyrs, and can still be viewed to this day. 

4. The Sedlec Ossuary is Decorated With Over 40,000 Skeletons

If golden skeletons are not your cup of tea, you can always take in the Sedlec Ossuary in the Czech Republic. The church dates back to the 13th century and today it’s most well known for being decorated with the skeletons of anywhere between 40,000 and 70,000 humans

The bones aren’t just stuck to walls; they have been arranged to create art. Ribs will be lined up alongside fingers and lead the eye to decorative crests made of pelvic bones and skulls. You can find chandeliers, candelabras, chalices, and several other grim, dusty decorations made from the rattling remains of thousands. 

According to legends, the abbot Of the monastery that used to be there went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and came back with a handful of soil from where Jesus had died. Everyone and their uncle literally wanted to be buried in that holy soil but after 30,000 graves were filled around the monastery, there was no room left. The rest of the bodies were turned into decorations over the years.

3. India Used to Dominate a Skeleton Black Market

You heard earlier that real skeletons were used in movies over the years, which means there’s a market for people selling them. For the most part, skeletons have been sold for medical study and research. 

You’ve probably seen those anatomy skeletons that are used in medical schools so that students can see the entire skeletal structure. Many of those today are fake, but once upon a time, they used real ones. This begs the question, where do you get skeletons from?

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For many years there was a black market in skeleton sales based in India. Most of the teaching skeletons around the world originated here. The skeletons aren’t donated by people who are aware of what’s happening, instead, they were robbed from graves, generally around the Calcutta region. 

The skeleton trade was an old one in India, dating back to colonial times. British doctors used to pay grave robbers to bring them fresh bodies, and for 200 years the trade continued with people raiding graves and selling what they found. In some parts of Calcutta whole graveyards are empty.

2. A 9,000-Year-Old Skeleton was DNA-matched to a Guy Who Lived Nearby

Genealogy has become a science that fascinates many people, now that you can run DNA tests and pay a few dollars to see your genetic history. For most people, it just links you to others across the country, and maybe even around the world so you get a better idea of your family tree. Sometimes it goes a little deeper. 

Cheddar Man was the name given to the 9,000-year-old skeletal remains found in an English cave in 1903, near the town of Cheddar. They are the most complete remains of a homo sapiens ever discovered. DNA tests on the ancient skeleton in 1997 found that it was related to a man who lived and worked a half mile away.

Adrian Targett, a British teacher, was informed that he was the closest living relative of Cheddar Man, who died a violent death 300 generations earlier. There’s not a lot one can do with information like that, but it was interesting to note that his people clearly liked that part of the world and hadn’t strayed far. 

1. Scans Showed a Skeleton Inside a Buddha Statue 

Most of us consider Buddhists peaceful and calm people. They believe in meditation and spiritualism and being good people overall. But there’s also a belief that mortal life is suffering and sometimes their beliefs come out in what others might consider creepy ways. Which is to say that at least one Buddha statue has an entire mummified monk inside of it.

In 2015, a Dutch buyer took possession of a 1,000-year-old Buddha statue. During the restoration process, a CT scan was done and the skeletal remains were discovered within. Papers within the statue, which had replaced the organs, also revealed the identity of the mummy as a monk. 

It’s believed the monk, named Liuquan, practiced something called self-mummification which included drinking a poisonous tea that would make the body too toxic for maggots to eat. He essentially both starved and preserved his living body until he died, ready to have his organs removed and his body put on display.  After years as a simple mummy, the body would have been entombed in the statue.

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