You are assuming the crematoriums did 1 body at a time, they did dozens at once, 50+ even. They did them fast since there was no need to preserve the ash in a state suitable for internment. The ashes were spread in nearby fields, this is well documented. They never did them 1 by 1.
The large death camps needed 1 train load a day to function at full capacity. It took 3000+ trains a day to supply the troops on the Russian front. The myth that the allies didn't bomb the camps because they harmed the Nazi was efforts is just an excuse: the allied command knew exactly what was going on and allowed it to happen.
You are assuming the crematoriums did 1 body at a time, they did dozens at once, 50+ even. They did them fast since there was no need to preserve the ash in a state suitable for internment. The ashes were spread in nearby fields, this is well documented. They never did them 1 by 1.
The large death camps needed 1 train load a day to function at full capacity. It took 3000+ trains a day to supply the troops on the Russian front. The myth that the allies didn't bomb the camps because they harmed the Nazi was efforts is just an excuse: the allied command knew exactly what was going on and allowed it to happen.