Like science fiction movies.. an Australian company will freeze the dead until the impossible

An Australian company has announced its desire to experiment with freezing human bodies in super-low temperatures, in the hope that it will be possible to revive them after decades, as is done in science fiction films and stories, and despite the fact that scientific and logical evidence confirms the impossibility of the matter, the company is determined to move forward with her project.

According to this company, the dead bodies will be immersed, first in liquid nitrogen, and then stored in steel chambers at temperatures below -200 degrees Celsius.

The cost of the operation is approximately 150 thousand Australian dollars, or approximately 84,793 pounds.

According to the British newspaper, Daily Mail, this storage process gives the brain the best chance of survival.

The company, which includes a high-tech facility for this purpose, is the first of its kind in Australia.

It has set up shop in the Holbrook countryside, while it is headquartered in Sydney, and currently has 40 places, most of which are for founders.

However, the project has plans to add an additional 600 sites.

 Cryonics is a technology for freezing and storing human remains at low temperatures, with controversial expectations that reviving the freezers may be possible in the future.

Southern Cryonics' website insists that once some medical developments are made in the future, participants in this trial may be able to resuscitate, however, there are no guarantees or refunds for anyone brave enough to sign up, according to the "Daily Star".

In the 1970s, California Cryonics Association president Robert Nelson shut down a similar facility after money ran out and the nine preserved bodies were left to rot.

The families of those at the facility later sued Nelson, and won it.

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