Yes. It means your claim it was impossible has now been dismissed as completely wrong. You are now claiming the Nazis didn't burn the bodies to hide their crime because it was expensive.
Good luck with that argument.
I have never claimed that burning bodies is impossible in itself. Rather, it is impossible to burn as many bodies as are said to have been burned at Treblinka, in the space and time claimed to have been used at Treblinka, or with a fuel loading consistent with the statements of the Treblinka witnesses. I gave some precise information on the resources needed in a particular instance of mass cremation:
According to a USDA veterinarian who helped during the U.K. outbreak, a 200-meter funeral pyre was used to incinerate 400 cows or 1,200 sheep or 1,600 pigs. Such a pyre required 1,000 railway ties, 8 tons of kindling, 400 wooden pallets, 4 tons of straw, 200 tons of coal, and 1,000 liters of diesel fuel.
[...]
According to a USDA veterinarian, in the United Kingdom the pyres generally burned for about 9 to 10 days before all of the carcasses were incinerated.
Again, I'd like to ask you a simple question, Matthew:
If 1200 sheep or 1600 pigs can be cremated in 9-10 days on a pyre 200 meters long with fuel consisting of 1,000 railway ties, 8 tons of kindling, 400 wooden pallets, 4 tons of straw, 200 tons of coal, and 1,000 liters of diesel fuel, how many Jews can be cremated overnight on a pyre 30 meters long with fuel consisting of perhaps one ton of dry wood and perhaps as much gasoline as can be soaked into the wood?
Now, I'd like to elaborate a bit on the issue of species. The average weight of carcasses in the UK FMD epidemic is usually given as
cattle = 500 kg
pigs = 100 kg
sheep = 50 kg.
You might wonder why more pigs than sheep can be burned, even though pigs are twice as large. We find an answer in
Carcass Disposal: a comprehensive review:
The efficiency and throughput of all three incineration methods—including open-air burning— depend on the type of species burned; the greater the percentage of animal fat, the more efficient a carcass will burn (Brglez, 2003, p. 32). Swine have a higher fat content than other species and will burn more quickly than other species (Ellis, 2001, p. 28).
Now, the Jews said to have been incinerated at Treblinka are not supposed to have been as fat as pigs, or even as fat as sheep. In fact, they are supposed to have been very poorly fed, and hence have had very low body fat. Out of the species considered, sheep seem to be the closest to the Jews, both in size and in body fat. However, there is an additional consideration: wool. A sheep's wool insulates the body and hinders cremation. Fortunately, we have
some information about shorn sheep as well, courtesy of the Australian Veterinary Emergency Plan (AUSVETPLAN):
For fuel estimation, one adult cattle carcase is equivalent to four adult pigs or shorn sheep, or three woolly adult sheep.
Note that the ratio 1 cow : 3 woolly sheep : 4 pigs match the ratios in the example from the UK: 400 cattle : 1200 (woolly) sheep : 1600 pigs. Using the information from the AUSVETPLAN, we can see that had the sheep been shorn, 1600 rather than 1200 of them could have been cremated.
A shorn sheep, with an average weight of 50 kg minus the weight of the wool (a few kg, probably), seems to be the best approximation of the Jews said to have been cremated. The main difference is that the Jews likely had less body fat, and consequently were harder to cremate.
The AUSVETPLAN also gives some information on fuel requirements:
Experience has demonstrated that carcases can be completely consumed using dry wood alone at the rate of 1.5 tonnes for a 500 kg adult bovine or 1.5 tonnes of coal briquettes or equivalent combinations. For multiple carcases, the amount of fuel may be reduced to 1.0 tonne per adult bovine because of economies of scale. Straw and liquid fuel are required to start the burn.
So in mass burning, 1000 kg of dry wood (plus liquid fuel and straw to start the burn) is needed per cow. The fuel requirement for a shorn sheep is 1/4th that for a cow, or 250 kg.
Given, say, 800,000 Jews cremated at Treblinka, with a fuel requirement of 250 kg of dry wood per Jew, we have a total fuel requirement of 200,000,000 kg of dry wood, or 200,000 metric tons. This cremation is supposed to have taken place in four months. Let's round that up to 133 days, so that there are 6,000 cremations per day. That means that every day, 250*6000 = 1,500,000 kg of dry wood had to be delivered to Treblinka. If we assume 3 ton trucks were used, that's 500 truckloads every day. Why do none of the testimonies talk about anything of this nature?
AUSVETPLAN also gives some information on how a pyre should be loaded:
Carcases should be stacked one row high and have sufficient air space between them. Restricting airflow around fuel and carcases will result in an inefficient burn.
Needless to say, 2000-3000 bodies on a pyre 30 meters long and 1.5 meters wide would be more than one row high, to put it mildly.