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Watch My Feet...As They Wash up on Shore

Posted by Nicole Pasulka


Lately, feet have been turning up in the strangest places, or should we say, place. 

So, where should you go if you wake up one morning missing your pedi?

The Strait of Georgia, in British Columbia, where, to date, six (That's right SIX) feet in tennis shoes have washed up on shore.

Where did these feet come from?  

Police are focusing on a possible link to a plane crash in the area in February 2005, from which four men are still missing. But it is also possible the feet come from suicide victims or fishermen who went overboard off Alaska.

And how did the feet make it to shore?

Bodies come apart at the joints when submerged in water for some time, and flesh begins to change into adipocere tissue, a soap-like substance sometimes called “grave wax” that crabs and microbes will eat, experts say.

Curtis Ebbesmeyer, a Seattle-based oceanographer, said that it was very strange that only feet had washed ashore.

“Running shoes mostly float, but half of all bodies float naturally,” he said. “The specific gravity of humans is about equal to water. You talk to your friends: some know if they are sinkers; others known they are floaters. Heads float too, so you would expect to find other remains. It’s obviously very puzzling.”

Thank you, Times Online, for the grizzly and downright informative analysis of footloss.  

 


+ DIGG + DEL.ICIO.US + REDDIT
Posted Jun 19 2008, 12:10 PM
Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Baron Von Monkeychow said:

It's grisly, not grizzly. Those are bears...

June 19, 2008 12:32 PM

jenny said:

Hometown pride, baby!  We also have the pig farmer serial killer, the birthplace of Greenpeace, and more Asians than Asia!  BC: the weirdest place on the planet, and my homeland.  <3

June 19, 2008 5:37 PM

jenny said:

BUT it's not real:

www.cbc.ca/.../bc-foot-no-human.html

June 19, 2008 5:49 PM

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about the blogger

Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook, Casserole Crazy: Hot Stuff for Your Oven was published in 2008. Emily recently escaped New York and now lives in a ridiculously large apartment in Kansas City, MO with her cat, but just one... so far.

Brian Fairbanks is a filmmaker living in the wilds of Brooklyn. He previously wrote for the Hartford Courant and Gawker. He won the Williamsburg Spelling Bee once. He loves cats, women with guns, and burning books.

Colleen Kane has been an editor at BUST and Playgirl magazines and has written for the endangered species of dead-tree magazines like SPIN and Plenty, as well as Radar Online and other websites. She lives in exile in Baton Rouge with her fiance, two dogs, and her former cat. Read her personal blogs at ColleenKane.com.

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