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interments

Interment refers to the final disposition of a deceased person by placing the body or cremated remains in a grave, tomb, mausoleum, or other resting place. While the term is closely related to burial, interment is often used to describe the placement of remains after a funeral service and may include entombment in above-ground structures as well as traditional underground burial. Interment is one of several dispositions available in modern mortuary practice, alongside cremation, alkaline hydrolysis, and scattering.

Common elements include preparation of the body (varying by culture and religion), transportation to a cemetery

Interment may take place in various settings: traditional earth burials in cemeteries; entombment in mausoleums or

Legal arrangements typically require permits, cemetery plot ownership or lease, and adherence to local regulations regarding

Practices surrounding interment are influenced by cultural, religious, and personal beliefs. Attitudes toward cremation and above-ground

or
appropriate
facility,
and
a
burial
or
entombment
service.
After
the
service,
the
casketed
body
or
container
of
ashes
is
lowered
into
the
grave,
crypt,
or
casketed
vault.
The
grave
is
filled
and
the
site
marked
with
a
headstone,
plaque,
or
other
memorial.
crypts;
above-ground
vaults;
and,
for
cremated
remains,
interment
in
columbariums
or
urn
gardens.
In
some
traditions,
interment
of
cremated
remains
is
prohibited,
while
in
others
it
is
common.
Green
burial
grounds
promote
natural
decomposition
with
minimal
embalming
or
non-plastic
containers.
burial
depth,
distance
from
water
sources,
and
notifications.
Responsible
parties,
usually
the
cemetery
or
funeral
home,
arrange
opening
and
closing
of
graves
and
perpetual
maintenance.
interment
have
shifted
in
many
regions,
with
growing
interest
in
environmentally
sustainable
or
'green'
burials
and
in
memorialization
through
non-traditional
markers.