<i>After falling about 0.15 kilometers (0.002% of the way to earth's center), you encounter about 20 atmospheres of air pressure and die from hyperoxia.</i><p>This fool is mixing up atmospheric pressure and water pressure. If you're going to speak with authority on something maybe you should spend more than five seconds thinking about it.<p><i>After falling about 1.1 kilometers (0.02% of the way to earth's center), you encounter a temperature of about 320 Kelvin</i><p>No. The temperature at 1.1km is about 36c. Uncomfortable, but not fatal. Certainly not so instantly fatal you die before passing the 2km depth on your fall.<p><i>your dried up bones and remnants of flesh encounter a temperature of about 1200 Kelvin and are completely incinerated into dust.</i><p>Burning a bone to dust requires temperatures over 1100c. He is mistaking the temperature inside a crematorium for the temperature required to incinerate bone. 1200 kelvins, like a crematorium, will produce chunks of calcified bone, not "completely incinerated into dust".<p>God this is a lazy article.