Now you Know
14868. Science Facts
A medieval cure for meningitis involved splitting a pigeon in two and laying the two halves, cut side down, on the patient's head.
14869. Science Facts
An old cure for a headache involved tying the rope used to hang a criminal around your temples.
14870. Science Facts
A common cure for all kinds of illnesses in the past was ‘bleeding' the patient. This could be done by the doctor making a small cut and putting a hot cup over the wound to suck out blood, or by putting blood-sucking leeches on the skin. Using leeches is being reintroduced by some western doctors.
14871. Science Facts
In England in the 1500s, horse urine was rubbed into the scalp as a cure for baldness.
14872. Science Facts
To catch the leeches for medical use, volunteers stand in rivers until the leeches attach themselves to their skin.
14873. Science Facts
A treatment for the skin disease psoriasis available in Turkey involves sitting in a bath full of live fish, which eat away all the flaking skin.
14874. Science Facts
In the late 1800s, the Egyptian railways were fuelled by burning ancient mummies because they were more plentiful than coal and wood.
14875. Science Facts
The Venus flytrap is a plant with fleshy traps that look rather like a clam, edged with spikes. If an insect lands on the trap, the halves snap shut, trapping it, and then juices from the plant dissolve the insect for the plant to absorb.
14876. Science Facts
To investigate what owls eat, scientists take apart owl pellets (owl faeces) and piece together the bones and fur from different creatures the owl has eaten.
14877. Science Facts
One of the best ways of cleaning an infected wound, used before the days of antibiotics and now with infections that antibiotics can't treat, is to put maggots into it to eat the rotting flesh.
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Name and Location : caspian sea, russia
Area : 393,898.00 sq. km.
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