HomeNewsTrendsCan you revive the dead? A cryogenic company has frozen its first client at minus 80 degrees

Can you revive the dead? A cryogenic company has frozen its first client at minus 80 degrees

The final stage of the cryogenic preservation saw the dead body cooled to minus 200 degrees Celsius in a controlled chamber, then placed in a dewar tank for long-term storage.

May 29, 2024 / 15:35 IST
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The architect's rendering of the Southern Cryonics facility. (Image: @StaSysAus/Facebook)
The architect's rendering of the Southern Cryonics facility. (Image: @StaSysAus/Facebook)

Australian company Southern Cryonics has successfully frozen its first client, marking the first known cryogenic preservation in the Southern Hemisphere.

A Sydney man in his 80s, who died earlier this month, has become Southern Cryonics' inaugural patient, known as Patient One. This milestone, achieved at the company's Holbrook facility, was both unexpected and swift.
Philip Rhoades, who has dedicated 14 years to preparing for this moment, described the process to ABC as both "very stressful" and groundbreaking.

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"There were a couple of other people who were existing members who we thought might be likely candidates for being the first, but, as it turned out, it was someone who wasn't an existing member," explained Rhoades. The man's family contacted Southern Cryonics just a week prior, setting off a rapid sequence of preparations.

Following the man's death on May 12, 2024, the preservation process began immediately. Rhoades, who had been awaiting the news in Sydney, quickly mobilized, collecting bags of ice on his way to the hospital. The body was then moved to a cold room and cooled to around 6 degrees Celsius before being transferred to a funeral home.