After recent test cutting incidents, I read in reply on several forums that almost immediately after death bone starts to "harden". This supposedly makes any cutting done on post-mortem bone not only a recipe guaranteed to damage your sword but so far out of scope of historical use that the results would have had no useful meaning.
However, the only "proof" offered for this idea was anecdotal and followed the line of "since we know that happens... let's try to come up with an explanation of why it happens." But nothing on IF it even happens at all.
Being more than a little interested in this, I have spent the day off and on talking with researchers from the Forensic Anthropology Center at The University of Tennessee Knoxville. This is the place that has Dr. Bass's famed "body farm".
I am going to continue an email discussion with them on the most accurate medium and practice for test cutting to help get us the best info possible. However, these are the facts as I understand them so far...
1) Bone is hard. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
2) Pigs are probably the best test medium we can use. They are in fact the next best thing to using an actual human cadaver.
3) There is no discernable hardening of "wet" bone encased in flesh after death.
4) The post-mortem "hardening" in the bones of a animal from a grocery store would be so small as to be insignificant, with the possible exception of a fraction of an inch at an exposed end.
5) Normal freezing and thawing should not effect bone hardness.
6) Bone hardening starts when it is naked, as happens through decay, contacts the air, and begins drying.
All in all, the consensus was that if it is fresh enough to eat... it represents living bone well enough to be used as a 1:1 equivalent for any experimentation we would do on it.

