Maine Code § 13-1032

Disposal of bodies
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Except as otherwise provided by law, or in case of a dead body being rightfully carried through or
removed from the State for the purpose of burial or disposition elsewhere, every dead body of a human
being dying within the State and the remains of any body after dissection therein must be decently
buried, entombed in a mausoleum, vault or tomb, cremated or subjected to natural organic reduction
within a reasonable time after death. The permanent disposition of such bodies or remains must be by
interment in the earth, or deposit in a chamber, vault or tomb of a cemetery owned, maintained and
operated in accordance with the laws of this State, by deposit in a crypt of a mausoleum or by cremation
or natural organic reduction. The remains of a human body after cremation or natural organic reduction
may be deposited in a niche of a columbarium or a crypt of a mausoleum, scattered in an area of a
cemetery, buried or disposed of in any manner not contrary to law. A deposit of the bodies or remains
of the human dead may not be made in a single chamber, vault or tomb partly above and partly below
the natural surface of the ground, unless the part thereof below such surface is of a permanent character,
constructed of materials capable of withstanding extreme climatic conditions, waterproof and airtight,
and capable of being sealed permanently to prevent all escape of effluvia, and unless the part thereof
above the natural surface of the ground is constructed of natural stone of a standard not less than that
required by the United States Government for monuments erected in national cemeteries, or durability
sufficient to withstand all conditions of weather. [PL 2023, c. 676, §2 (AMD).]

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