About Me

I'm a PhD student researching the role of the archaeological dead in contemporary British society. Think of this as a scrapbook of all the interesting links, snippets of information and random bits and bobs I come across pertaining to death, dying and the dead. Enjoy?!

Instagram Shots

    See more

    More liked posts

    discoverynews:

    sagansense:

    Heart of Glass: The Art of Medical Models

    Gary Farlow can make art out of arteries. He and his team of 10 at Farlow’s Scientific Glassblowing are able to transform the body’s vasculature—and nearly all of its other parts—into an ornate borosilicate glass sculpture, from the heart’s ventricles to the brain’s circle of Willis. “We do almost every part of the body,” Farlow says. “It can take a pretty artistic mind to make some of these things.” With the help of cardiologists, the team creates custom see-through systems for science and medical training. Their anatomically correct models can be designed to simulate blood flow, teach placement of catheters and angioplasty devices, or simply test or demo new surgical gizmos. Individual arteries, veins, and capillaries are shaped and fused together, one at a time. Ground-glass joints are added at the exposed ends so a head, say, can be connected to the carotid arteries should customers want to expand their model. A full-body setup could cost $25,000, so don’t get any bright ideas about using one as a brandy decanter.

    these would look absolutely stunning in my foyer*

    *author’s note: i do not have a foyer.

    WARNING: This video contains flashing images as well as subjects and footage that some viewers may find disturbing.

    This taster is for a proposed series about the horrors of pre-anaesthetic medicine. We’ll be exploring subjects such as Ananomists, Anthropedic Bibliopegy (Binding books in Human Skin), Body Snatchers, Excecutions, Pioneers of modern surgery, eclectic collections of medical specimens and stories of the exploitation of the medically deformed.

    Shot in a variety of formats, including HD Video, 35mm and Super 8, this piece is a showcase of the visual style we hope to pursue with a broadcast commission.

    This will make such a brilliant TV series! Check out Dr Lindsey Fitzharris’ fabulous blog, The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice, here!

    
Lindsey Fitzharris of the The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice with the hands of a 19th-century suicide victim, housed at St Bart’s Pathology Museum, London. Electrical wire can be seen wrapped around the wrists. Learn more about the people who died and the surgeons who dissected their bodies in the upcoming trailer for “Medicine’s Dark Secrets” - to be posted soon on The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice!

    Lindsey Fitzharris of the The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice with the hands of a 19th-century suicide victim, housed at St Bart’s Pathology Museum, London. Electrical wire can be seen wrapped around the wrists. 

    Learn more about the people who died and the surgeons who dissected their bodies in the upcoming trailer for “Medicine’s Dark Secrets” - to be posted soon on The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice!

    Human Corpses Are Prize In Global Drive For Profits

    On Feb. 24, Ukrainian authorities made an alarming discovery: bones and other human tissues crammed into coolers in a grimy white minibus.

    Investigators grew even more intrigued when they found, amid the body parts, envelopes stuffed with cash and autopsy results written in English.

    What the security service had disrupted was not the work of a serial killer but part of an international pipeline of ingredients for medical and dental products that are routinely implanted into people around the world.

    Grim.

    fuckyeahforensics.tumblr.com

    scienceon:

    Blog: fuckyeahforensics.tumblr.com

    Fields Discussed: Forensics, biology, anatomy, physiology, genetics, medicine, crime scene investigation, pathology, toxicology, forensic techniques, entomology, DNA, criminology and more!

    Extra Information: I try to post daily and I sometimes have contests and giveaways. If you don’t like blood, death, or insects, I don’t recommend you follow. If you do, then feel free to follow

    (via dead-men-talking)

    collective-history:

Trepanated skull, Iron age. The perimeter of the hole in the skull is rounded off by ingrowth of new bony tissue, indicating that the patient survived the operation.
Evidence of trepanation has been found in prehistoric human remains from Neolithic times onward. Cave paintings indicate that people believed the practice would cure epileptic seizures, migraines, and mental disorders. The bone that was trepanned was kept by the prehistoric people and may have been worn as a charm to keep evil spirits away. Evidence also suggests that trepanation was primitive emergency surgery after head wounds to remove shattered bits of bone from a fractured skull and clean out the blood that often pools under the skull after a blow to the head. Such injuries were typical for primitive weaponry such as slings and war clubs.
Trepanation is perhaps the oldest surgical procedure for which there is archaeological evidence, and in some areas may have been quite widespread. Out of 120 prehistoric skulls found at one burial site in France dated to 6500 BC, 40 had trepanation holes. Many prehistoric and premodern patients had signs of their skull structure healing, suggesting that many of those subjected to the surgery survived.

    collective-history:

    Trepanated skull, Iron age. The perimeter of the hole in the skull is rounded off by ingrowth of new bony tissue, indicating that the patient survived the operation.

    Evidence of trepanation has been found in prehistoric human remains from Neolithic times onward. Cave paintings indicate that people believed the practice would cure epileptic seizures, migraines, and mental disorders. The bone that was trepanned was kept by the prehistoric people and may have been worn as a charm to keep evil spirits away. Evidence also suggests that trepanation was primitive emergency surgery after head wounds to remove shattered bits of bone from a fractured skull and clean out the blood that often pools under the skull after a blow to the head. Such injuries were typical for primitive weaponry such as slings and war clubs.

    Trepanation is perhaps the oldest surgical procedure for which there is archaeological evidence, and in some areas may have been quite widespread. Out of 120 prehistoric skulls found at one burial site in France dated to 6500 BC, 40 had trepanation holes. Many prehistoric and premodern patients had signs of their skull structure healing, suggesting that many of those subjected to the surgery survived.

    (via alphacaeli)

    Doctors, Dissection and Resurrection Men

    Explore the early 19th century history of human dissection and the trade in dead bodies through dramatic evidence unearthed during Museum of London Archaeology excavations at the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel.

    Exhibition runs from 19 October 2012 — 14 April 2013, admission charges apply.

    Can’t wait to see this! Ahem.

    (Source: museumoflondon.org.uk)

    Donating your body to science? Nobody wants a chubby corpse

    shut-in-at-a-stand-still:

    It’s a rare day when Richard Drake turns down a dead body, but last week, he had no choice.

    At 6-foot-1 and 350 pounds, the deceased in question was simply too big for the Cleveland Clinic Body Donation Program, which provides specimens for anatomy classes at the Lerner College of Medicine and elsewhere.

    “Someone that’s shorter and carrying a lot of weight, that is a problem,” said Drake, director of anatomy and a professor of surgery. “The storage is one issue, but when you are obese, there’s a lot of tissue everywhere. The students don’t get as good a learning opportunity.”

    Reluctantly, Drake informed the dead man’s family he’d have to turn down the donation request because their loved one exceeded the size limits for medical research.

    “They understood that, because, actually, they had tried a few other places,” Drake said. “They were sort of checking around.”

    In a country where more than a third of adults are obese, the impact of extra weight extends, it seems, even beyond death.

    Officials at some whole body donation programs in the United States tell msnbc.com they’ve turned away corpses that are too fat for scientific study. Others say the bigger issue is that potential donors simply don’t sign up once they learn of weight limits that can be as low as 170 pounds, but generally top out at 300 pounds.

    “Family members, or the person themselves, sometimes they’re a little taken aback,” said Stephen D. Anderson, coordinator of the Willed Body Program at the University of Louisville School of Medicine in Kentucky.  “They didn’t assume there were any restrictions.”

    That surprise could be a problem, considering that a 2004 Johns Hopkins School of Medicine study found that about half of adults surveyed would consider donating their bodies to science.

    But officials at the university-affiliated programs that supply perhaps 10,000 to 15,000 dead bodies each year to the nation’s nearly 140 medical schools say that weight and height limits are an unavoidable part of the process.

    “The embalming process adds considerable weight. Generally, a 250-pound person might weigh 350 to 400 pounds when embalmed,” said Richard Dey, professor and chairman of the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy at West Virginia University in Morgantown. His program receives about 275 bodies a year and turns away at least a few.

    To be frank, bodies taller than about 6-foot-4 or heavier than about 300 pounds simply don’t fit on the trays that are sometimes stacked six high in the coolers where the deceased are kept, experts say.

    It can be difficult for technicians to handle huge corpses, which have to be lifted and transferred frequently, often by slim technicians or students, said John Lee Powers, curator of anatomical materials at the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C.  That program limits donors to between 170 pounds and 180 pounds, though an exceptionally tall donor might be allowed at 190.

    “It’s the maximum our equipment will handle,” Powers said.

    There’s also the educational aspect to consider. Donated bodies are used primarily for first-year anatomy students, who need to learn how the human body is supposedto look, said Ronn Wade, director of the Anatomical Services Division of the University of Maryland Medical School in Baltimore.

    “In a perfect world, they’d like to have a perfect body with perfect anatomy — or near perfect,” said Wade, whose program is among the largest in the nation, with a peak donation of some 1,800 bodies a year.

    Studying obesity and other pathologies can come later, once students are familiar with the basics, he added.

    Obese bodies are more difficult, time-consuming and unpleasant to study, said Wade, who also heads his state’s anatomy board.
    “Basically it’s having to get at the structures you want to see,” he said. “Between the skin and the rest, there’s layers and layers of fat cells.”

    Only about a quarter of the bodies Wade receives meet the ideal criteria, he said. Perhaps 5 percent of them are morbidly obese.

    Wade generally doesn’t reject them outright. But they won’t be used by medical students in first-year classes. They might wind up as clinical specimens used for practice by paramedics or other medical professionals. Some obese bodies can’t be used at all, so they’re simply cremated and the remains are returned to the families — without ever serving any research purpose.

    So far, medical schools are still able to get enough lean bodies for students to use, experts said. Some programs use corpses from for-profit tissue brokers, which are loosely regulated and supply an unknown number of bodies each year.

    Still, considering America’s growing girth, some experts are worried about the future.

    Anderson, the director of the University of Louisville program, says he can’t use about 10 percent of the 175 to 200 bodies donated each year because of size problems.

    He said he’s thought about upping the program’s weight limit from 200 pounds to 250 pounds to ensure a steady supply.

    “If we keep it at 200, we may see that we’re turning down potential donors because of that,” he said.

    Having to turn down any willing donor is a shame, said Drake, the Cleveland Clinic expert who is also an officer with the American Association of Anatomists. He doubted the family of the 6-foot-1, 350-pound man would find a program to accept his remains. Instead, they likely had to make other arrangements for the man’s disposition.

    “It is an emotional thing,” he said. “People really do want to do this.”

    That was the case for the mother of Tara Parker-Pope, a New York Times health reporter who recently wrote about the struggle to lose weight and keep it off, both in her own family and in the population at large.

    “My mother died of esophageal cancer six years ago,” Parker-Pope wrote. “It was her great regret that in the days before she died, the closest medical school turned down her offer to donate her body because she was obese.”

    Those who leave their remains to science tend to be sensitive folks interested in enhancing the public good, said Wade, the Maryland expert who has promoted whole body donation for more than 35 years.  

    At the end of a life perhaps spent struggling with weight, learning they’re too heavy to fulfill those altruistic wishes can be devastating.

    “It’s kind of another stigma,” said Wade. “They kind of feel victimized.”

    (Source: livingxvxfaith, via theolduvaigorge)

    biomedicalephemera:

This is the oldest known apothecary jar. It was found to contain traces of ashish, used as an ingredient in Egyptian pharmacopoeia. The face on the jar is most likely the face of Bes, the deformed pygmy god who became revered as a god of protection against evil spirits (thought to be the cause of many ailments in ancient Egypt). After a legend of Bes assisting the hippopotamus goddess Tarawet in childbirth, he began to become the deity worshiped by pregnant women - he was considered to protect them from malevolent spirits and spells during pregnancy, and assist them during childbirth, as he did with Tarawet.

    biomedicalephemera:

    This is the oldest known apothecary jar. It was found to contain traces of ashish, used as an ingredient in Egyptian pharmacopoeia. The face on the jar is most likely the face of Bes, the deformed pygmy god who became revered as a god of protection against evil spirits (thought to be the cause of many ailments in ancient Egypt). After a legend of Bes assisting the hippopotamus goddess Tarawet in childbirth, he began to become the deity worshiped by pregnant women - he was considered to protect them from malevolent spirits and spells during pregnancy, and assist them during childbirth, as he did with Tarawet.

    Via The Telegraph

Mystery condition makes woman age 50 years in just a few days
Doctors have been left baffled by a strange condition which saw a woman of 23 age 50 years in a matter of days.

Vietnamese woman Nguyen Thi Phuong now looks like a septugenarian after the rapid aging affliction took hold following an allergic reaction to seafood.
Her sad story began in 2008, when her youthful beauty began to fade over the course of just a few days, leaving her with sagging, wrinkled skin all over her face and body.
Until now she has been forced to wear a mask in public to hide her appearance from prying eyes, but now doctors are attempting to establish what caused her sudden and horrifying ageing.

    Via The Telegraph

    Mystery condition makes woman age 50 years in just a few days

    Doctors have been left baffled by a strange condition which saw a woman of 23 age 50 years in a matter of days.

    Vietnamese woman Nguyen Thi Phuong now looks like a septugenarian after the rapid aging affliction took hold following an allergic reaction to seafood.

    Her sad story began in 2008, when her youthful beauty began to fade over the course of just a few days, leaving her with sagging, wrinkled skin all over her face and body.

    Until now she has been forced to wear a mask in public to hide her appearance from prying eyes, but now doctors are attempting to establish what caused her sudden and horrifying ageing.

    Contraception in ancient Egypt: Crocodile dung, mixed with sour milk, rolled into a pessary, and inserted into the vagina.

    biomedicalephemera:

    Well…it would keep any amorous encounters to a minimum…

    But! The acid in crocodile dung is strong enough to be an effective spermicide, even without the fact that, well, there’s crocodile crap in your vagina. The sour milk made the dung more easily pliable and contributed to the acidity; water would have diluted it, and using fresh milk would have been a waste of food.

    Despite the ‘EWWW’ factor, this is actually genius!

    thisbelongsinamuseum:

On this date in 1881 U.S. President James A. Garfield died of wounds suffered during a shooting from a few months before. He holds the record for the second shortest presidency (just 200 days) and as one of four presidents to be assassinated. Garfield’s killer, Charles J. Guiteau, lives on…or should I say his brain lives on at the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia. Another part of Guiteau’s brain as well as his bones sit alongside his victim’s backbone and a couple of ribs at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C. Fortunately, the museum sees the need for famous assassinations to stick together. Lincoln’s life mask and hands, the bullet fired from the pistol that ended his life, and pieces of his  hair and skull are also part of the museum’s collection.
What’s most interesting about the National         Museum     of Health and Medicine is not the 5,000 skeletons and 8,000 preserved organs, but that it’s America’s oldest Cabinet of Curiosity, going back to 1862. It’s a national trove of plasticized bones, 25 million artifacts in total. One of the most popular exhibits is the preserved hairball of a 12-year old girl who compulsively ate her own hair. Sadly, this taxpayer-funded carnival freak show closed its doors this past April. Walter Reed Army Medical Center voted to close the museum and find a new home in suburban Bethesda by 2012. Let’s hope it reopens soon!
(Image Source)

    thisbelongsinamuseum:

    On this date in 1881 U.S. President James A. Garfield died of wounds suffered during a shooting from a few months before. He holds the record for the second shortest presidency (just 200 days) and as one of four presidents to be assassinated. Garfield’s killer, Charles J. Guiteau, lives on…or should I say his brain lives on at the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia. Another part of Guiteau’s brain as well as his bones sit alongside his victim’s backbone and a couple of ribs at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C. Fortunately, the museum sees the need for famous assassinations to stick together. Lincoln’s life mask and hands, the bullet fired from the pistol that ended his life, and pieces of his hair and skull are also part of the museum’s collection.

    What’s most interesting about the National Museum of Health and Medicine is not the 5,000 skeletons and 8,000 preserved organs, but that it’s America’s oldest Cabinet of Curiosity, going back to 1862. It’s a national trove of plasticized bones, 25 million artifacts in total. One of the most popular exhibits is the preserved hairball of a 12-year old girl who compulsively ate her own hair. Sadly, this taxpayer-funded carnival freak show closed its doors this past April. Walter Reed Army Medical Center voted to close the museum and find a new home in suburban Bethesda by 2012. Let’s hope it reopens soon!

    (Image Source)

    (Source: thisbelongsinamuseum)

    theossuary:

I just got back from a visit to my mom and stepdad in Maine. They’re antique dealers, and they recently scored a box full of Harper’s Weeklies from the 1860s and Woman’s Home Companions from the early 20th century. I found this ad, buried in a page full of tiny mail-order advertisements for scrofula and drunkenness cures, in a copy of Harper’s Weekly from July 25, 1868.
You might already know that embalming really took off in America around the time of the Civil War. From Wikipedia’s history of embalming:

Contemporary embalming methods advanced markedly during the American Civil War, which once again involved many servicemen dying far from home, and their family wishing them returned for local burial. Dr. Thomas Holmes received a commission from the Army Medical Corps to embalm the corpses of dead Union officers to return to their families. Military authorities also permitted private embalmers to work in military-controlled areas. The passage of Abraham Lincoln’s body home for burial was made possible by embalming and it brought the possibilities and potential of embalming to a wider public notice.
In 1867, the German chemist August Wilhelm von Hofmann discovered formaldehyde, whose preservative properties were soon discovered and which became the foundation for modern methods of embalming, replacing previous methods based on alcohol and the use of arsenical salts.

I’m not sure where “Nekrosozoic” fits in to all this, whether it was related to the discovery of formaldehyde in 1867, or if it ever really took off. It seems that its defining characteristic was that it involved applying liquid with a paint brush to the outside of the body, as opposed to injecting chemicals into the corpse via an artery.
A quick search turned up this article from the New York Times from around the same time as this ad (May 31, 1868), which describes a demonstration of the Nekrosozoic process before “a large number of medical gentlemen” at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. Some highlights:

The subject before the audience had been dead 107 days. On being cut open by Dr Janeway, the liver, lungs, heart, viscera, and fluids were found as fresh as immediately after death, and but slightly unpleasant in odor. Pieces of the liver and kidneys were handed round on plates for the inspection of those present, who applied their noses with great apparent satisfaction.
[…] A great advantage of this embalming process is, that it can be applied by any one, and is exceedinly useful in keeping bodies that have journeys to perform before burial. […]
The audience, after examining, in turn, sundry tissues of the body, through microscopes, retired much gratified.

Nice.

    theossuary:

    I just got back from a visit to my mom and stepdad in Maine. They’re antique dealers, and they recently scored a box full of Harper’s Weeklies from the 1860s and Woman’s Home Companions from the early 20th century. I found this ad, buried in a page full of tiny mail-order advertisements for scrofula and drunkenness cures, in a copy of Harper’s Weekly from July 25, 1868.

    You might already know that embalming really took off in America around the time of the Civil War. From Wikipedia’s history of embalming:

    Contemporary embalming methods advanced markedly during the American Civil War, which once again involved many servicemen dying far from home, and their family wishing them returned for local burial. Dr. Thomas Holmes received a commission from the Army Medical Corps to embalm the corpses of dead Union officers to return to their families. Military authorities also permitted private embalmers to work in military-controlled areas. The passage of Abraham Lincoln’s body home for burial was made possible by embalming and it brought the possibilities and potential of embalming to a wider public notice.

    In 1867, the German chemist August Wilhelm von Hofmann discovered formaldehyde, whose preservative properties were soon discovered and which became the foundation for modern methods of embalming, replacing previous methods based on alcohol and the use of arsenical salts.

    I’m not sure where “Nekrosozoic” fits in to all this, whether it was related to the discovery of formaldehyde in 1867, or if it ever really took off. It seems that its defining characteristic was that it involved applying liquid with a paint brush to the outside of the body, as opposed to injecting chemicals into the corpse via an artery.

    A quick search turned up this article from the New York Times from around the same time as this ad (May 31, 1868), which describes a demonstration of the Nekrosozoic process before “a large number of medical gentlemen” at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. Some highlights:

    The subject before the audience had been dead 107 days. On being cut open by Dr Janeway, the liver, lungs, heart, viscera, and fluids were found as fresh as immediately after death, and but slightly unpleasant in odor. Pieces of the liver and kidneys were handed round on plates for the inspection of those present, who applied their noses with great apparent satisfaction.

    […] A great advantage of this embalming process is, that it can be applied by any one, and is exceedinly useful in keeping bodies that have journeys to perform before burial. […]

    The audience, after examining, in turn, sundry tissues of the body, through microscopes, retired much gratified.

    Nice.

    (Source: theossuary)