As said, the burns indicated by the sign on the truck (BTW its a concrete mixer, not a cement mixer) are caused by the lime. I knew a guy on site who once (and only once) knelt in wet concrete to 'float it off' and had serious burns to both knees. He was off work for over a month. However the other point is that concrete undergoes an exothermic reaction. This means it gives off heat during the first 10 hours or so of its curing. I did an experiment at Uni when doing my Civ Eng degree that involved mixing some concrete, putting it into a containment vessel (thats a milk bottle to you and me!) and inserting an electronic thermometer. About 5 hours after mixing, it was over 100C, but dropped back to normal about 5 hours after that. This is why it is hard to make thick concrete sections, because you have to allow for the thermal contraction after curing.