Survivalist Pro
Photo: Ivan Samkov
As they discover, while zombies can't swim, their porous corpses make them more actice.
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Read More »As it turns out, hiding out at sea isn’t much safer than being on land during a zombie apocalypse. Food and fresh water are limited, the weather is unforgiving, and disease spreads really quickly. And the one advantage you’d think you’d have — distance from zombies — is fleeting. In Season 2 of Fear the Walking Dead, the spin-off to hit AMC series The Walking Dead, a family climbs aboard a stranger’s yacht to escape zombie-ridden Los Angeles only to find an ocean teeming with the dead. As they discover, while zombies can’t swim, their porous corpses make them more actice. In the interest of future survival and holding a fictional zombie show accountable to biology, Inverse consulted with Eric Schulze, a PhD-holding molecular and cellular biologist who hosts a weekly Smithsonian series called Ask Smithsonian. As he told us, while zombies can survive on the ocean, it’s not a great long-term prospect for them. “I had to make some approximations from bacteria. I don’t know too many people that study zombies floating in the ocean,” Schulze joked with Inverse over the phone. “The ocean is a harsh place for any biological tissue that lives on land. Especially tissue that’s no longer regulating its normal function. With zombies those rules go out the window.”
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Read More »So, are the oceans safe after all? According to Schulze, it depends where you’re cruising. Currently on Fear the Walking Dead, the passengers aboard the Abigail are sailing down the Pacific from Los Angeles to San Diego (and after this week, Baja, against everyone’s wishes). But what if it were somewhere colder, like the Arctic? The zombie will still decompose, just differently. “A backyard pond in Louisiana in August is going to be bacterial soup of living things that will eat anything that comes in. A Russian Arctic lake, that has low oxygen [and] not a lot of life in it, would be like the deep ocean where it would take years [to decompose]. In a tropical zone that body is not going to last long at all. There’s open wounds. The zombie itself is carrying tons of bacteria in its digestive tract and skin, living in a watery environment is paradise for the bacteria in and around them.” In fact, Schulze warns this is where zombies get really dangerous at sea. While in Walking Dead lore, all living beings are capable of turning, in any other scenario (like say, 12 Monkeys or iZombie), swimming with zombies is just as fatal as getting bit. “If we assume [the virus is] carried by blood or a protein in the blood or their saliva, if you’re in a moderately strong current with high amounts of water [the pathogen is] going to be dissolved to a point where it would be undetectable. It would be like a Where’s Waldo of the zombie protein, floating in the ocean.” But Schulze says that the ocean is still a better place to hang out during a zombie apocalypse. “I would definitely rather be at sea,” he answers. “Give me a mai tai and the bow of a ship.”
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