The most macabre experiments
Bats, dead dogs, death nurses are among the experiments on behalf of science.
Ever since Mary Shelley conceived of Frankenstein, stories of insane scientists doing all kinds of frightening experiments have always been thoroughly exploited by novelists. However, sometimes life is even more creepy than imagined. From corpse dogs to brain control experiments, here are some of the worst cases, according to The Huffington Post.
Earth swallowed by a black hole?
When the physicists first pressed the start button of the Large Particle Accelerator (LHC), some people held their breath in fear. In recent years, rumors surrounding the LHC's risk of destruction also convinced many people, that particle accelerators can create small black holes and devour the Earth. In 2008, a group of people even filed a lawsuit with courts in France, Germany and Switzerland, requesting an intervention to close the LHC, and the German court has just completed a recent lawsuit in Muenster.
Although it may sound reasonable, but the scientific community assured that there is no basis to show that the LHC will push the earth to the point of destruction. An overall study has calculated that the amount of cosmic radiation hitting the surface of the Earth periodically cyclically creates higher electric shock waves than the LHC. According to the study, nature has arbitrarily deployed experimental projects equivalent to hundreds of thousands of LHC machines to the earth, but our planet still exists today.
Live corpse dog
In 1940, Russian scientists released a video showing a number of life-sustained dogs in a few hours. These heads can still wave their ears when they hear the noise and even lick their edges. At that time, the group of scientists claimed to be able to keep dog heads alive by artificial blood circulation systems. However, that is the first time scientists have created a corpse dog. In 2005, American scientists created 'zombie' flocks. Dogs die as soon as the blood is drained from the body and replaced with salt and sugar salts, according to University of Pittsburgh experts. Three hours later, the blood transfusion team gave the experiment, accompanied by an electric shock. The dogs were revived, and most of them seemed normal, except for some that were badly damaged. Published on the Yearbook of Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine edition, this report shows that such a treatment could one day save lives of patients who are bleeding too quickly beyond the doctor's control.
The creepy version of the deadly dog in the famous Resident Evil series
Brain control
In the 1950s, CIA launched a secret program called MKULTRA, with the aim of finding drugs and methods to control other people's minds. For the next two decades, the agency used hallucinogens, sleep deprivation and electric shock measures to brainwash the subject.
CIA scientists conducted more than 149 research projects under the MKULTRA program. In one case, they tested the effect of LSD (Lysergic Acid Diethylamide) in society by using this substance to bar owners in New York and San Francisco, who did not know they were being taken advantage of. ' White mouse'. In other cases, they seduce addicts to use LSD in exchange for heroin. After the scandal of eavesdropping on Watergate, in 1973 the CIA Director Richard ordered the cancellation of all records related to this loss of humanity research. However, some records were still leaked out, of which more than 20,000 pages recorded with the author John Marks.
Death nurse
While CIA attempts to control the minds of others, it turns out that it is easy to want others to do what they want: just saying it out loud is what you want. In 1963, social psychologist Stanley Milgram said Yale University students were ready to shock strangers at the request of a competent person. However, psychiatrist Charles Hofling wanted to test this. In the 1966 report, Hofling described a grisly experiment: an anonymous doctor called a night nurse and asked them to double the presumptive pharmacist part of an unapproved drug. multiply. This is a fake doctor, and the medicine is actually a harmless sugar pill. As a result, 21 out of 22 nurses obediently followed the doctor's orders without asking anything.
Bat bomb
During World War II, US Marine Corps conducted a bat training project as a "deadly force" against Japan. A Pennsylvania state dentist, Lytle Adams, first submitted the idea to the White House in 1942, after visiting bats at Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico state. Mr. Adams proposed tying up bat explosives and taking advantage of their echolocation to find shelter in the barn or attic. As planned, bomb bats will fly straight to Japan, staying in the attic of houses most of the wood built in the country's cities, and burning homes.
It seems reasonable to hear that, the marines forces captured thousands of bats in the New Mexico region and built explosive devices to tie them on their backs. But this project was shelved in 1943, probably because Washington created an atomic bomb.
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