2024 Author: Adelina Croftoon | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-17 02:07
With spontaneous spontaneous combustion, a person can burn to ash in a matter of minutes (or even seconds) and such a high temperature is often not maintained even in crematoria. Therefore, there are very few of those who survived this phenomenon …
One of the most unusual anomalous phenomena associated with humans is believed to be spontaneous combustion - when a person suddenly burns out from fire, the source of which remains unclear and appears as if inside the body itself.
As a rule, this happens in a very short time and at extremely high temperatures, often from the victims then only a handful of ash remains (even bones often remain in crematoria) or a leg or hand untouched by fire (for some unknown reason).
For centuries, spontaneous combustion of a person has been written in literature and historical chronicles, and today there are several scientific versions of how this could happen. However, none of the versions are 100% suitable for all cases.
It is possible that this riddle could be solved by those people who have experienced spontaneous combustion and at the same time remained alive (at least for a while). Alas, there are very few of them.
In October 1776, the Italian monk Don Gio Maria Bertoli was in the small town of Filetto and spent the night at the house of his son-in-law. Soon after he went to sleep in his room, people heard Bertoli's loud cry coming from there, as if from very intense pain.
When they came running to the screams, they saw that the whole body of the monk was engulfed in blue flames and the monk writhed on the floor and screamed. As soon as people approached him, the flame began to extinguish and then completely disappeared, leaving Bertoli alive.
The monk was lifted from the floor and laid on the bed. He moaned in severe pain and when he was stripped, it turned out that his entire body was covered with severe burns. He could hardly explain what had happened. According to him, everything happened suddenly, in an instant, while his silk hat on his head was burned to a crisp crust, but other clothes were not damaged at all.
The strangest thing was that in Bertoli's modest room there was no source of open fire at all. There was no fireplace, no candles. The room also did not smell of smoke.
A doctor was called to Bertoli and he described the burns as dangerous and called the monk's condition severe. This is how it was described in the brochure of the time:
Dr. Battaglia found that the skin of the right arm was almost completely separated from the flesh, from the shoulders to the thighs on the right side, the skin was equally and evenly damaged, this was the most affected part of the body and the infection had already begun, despite scarification (cutting off the edges of the wound).
The patient complained of burning thirst and had convulsions, putrefactive and bilious stools came out of him, which was supplemented by constant vomiting, accompanied by fever and delirium. On the fourth day, after two hours of comatose numbness, he died. During the entire period of his suffering, it was impossible to find the cause of his symptoms."
What happened to Bertoli remains a mystery. His case still remains a bizarre historical incident.
The next story happened in 1822 in France. One summer afternoon, a local man named Renato was walking in a field near the village of Loynyan when he suddenly felt a sharp pain in his right index finger. He glanced briefly at the finger and his eyes widened in horror - the finger was engulfed in fire.
He began to wave his finger to drive away the flame, but on the contrary, it intensified, now his whole hand was burning. Renato began to hit his pants with a burning hand and set them on fire, after which he panicked and ran to his home and started shouting to his wife to bring a bucket of cold water.
The woman brought water and Renato plunged the burning hand into the bucket, but the flame did not go out! Then he thrust his hand into the wet mud in the yard, then into the jug of milk, but the hand continued to burn.
By that time, a crowd of onlookers crowded around Renato's house, who looked at his running around like a circus performance. One of the onlookers finally gave him holy water and this water extinguished the flame. When Renato looked at his hand, it turned out that although his pants were burnt, the skin on the injured hand itself looked completely intact.
This curious case was described in the same 1822 in the French medical journal "Nouveau Journal de Médecine, Chirurgie, Pharmacie, Volume 15" and the reasons for this phenomenon were also unsolved.
The two cases described above caused great panic among the victims, but the next case, described in the American Journal of the Medical Sciences, Volume 17, differs in that the victim was surprisingly calm.
This happened in January 1835 when a professor at the University of Nashville named James Hamilton was conducting an experiment with atmospheric measurements. He was taking turns checking the readings of the barometer, thermometer and hygrometer when he suddenly felt a sharp pain in his left hip.
At first he tried to ignore her, but as the pain intensified, he finally looked at his leg and saw that his thigh was engulfed in flames that could be seen through the fabric of his pants. With good composure, the professor decided that the fire should be blocked from access to oxygen and covered his thigh with his hands, after which the flame went out.
After that, the professor took off his pants and examined the injured leg. On the skin of his left thigh, he found only a small spot the size of a dime, which looked more like an abrasion than a burn. The pants showed the same smooth round hole, but there were no holes in the underwear, and this introduced the professor to bewilderment.
The damaged skin in the small rounded wound hurt quite a lot, and then this place healed for a very long time. By that time, Hamilton decided that he was faced with spontaneous combustion and that a flame arose in his body and burst out to the surface through that very hole.
There were also quite modern cases of this kind. In 1974, door salesman Jack Angel slept in his mobile van in Savannah, Georgia, and woke up in pain.
He saw that his chest, arms, legs and back were covered with burns and could not understand their source - he did not smoke, there was no fire source in the van and nothing else around him was damaged. Including the clothes in which he was wearing were not damaged, which turned out to be the strangest.
When Angel went to the doctors, they said that everything looks like the source of the flame was inside the body itself, specifically somewhere inside his left hand, from where it spread to other parts of the body.
In 1985, there was also the case of Vietnam War veteran Frank Baker, who caught fire while on vacation with friends. He was just sitting on the couch in the house and suddenly found himself engulfed in fire. His friends immediately pulled water from the river and extinguished the flames, but its cause was never known. According to friends of Baker, he caught fire right before their eyes, and according to doctors who examined his body, the fire most likely originated somewhere in his stomach. Whether Baker had any burns, history does not indicate.
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