Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2015

These Brilliant Creators Died As A Result Of Their Genius Inventions.





If making revolutionary things were easy, we’d all do it. Not only do you have to come up with an idea that no one has ever thought of, you have to make it come into being–without any pre-existing guidelines to follow. You have to be the one to show people how it’s done or, like some of the people in the list below, how it should not be done if you don’t want to get seriously injured or die.


The inventors, creators, and designers below paid the ultimate price for the things they helped bring into this world.




1.) Franz Reichelt



Reichelt or the “Flying Tailor,” as he was sometimes called, died after jumping from the Eiffel Tower while testing his wearable parachute. It didn’t work.



2.) Max Valier



Valier died when the alcohol-fueled rocket car he was testing exploded.



3.) Otto Lilienthal



Lilienthal, who was considered to be the “Glider King,” died while testing one of the hang gliders he had developed.



4.) William Bullock



Bullock died while getting his gangrenous foot that was injured by a rotary printing press, an invention of his, amputated.



5.) Sylvester H. Roper



Roper passed away while riding the steam-powered bicycle he designed.



6.) Thomas Andrews






BBC



Andrews, who was chief naval architect of the company that built the Titanic, died aboard the ship on its ill-fated maiden voyage.



7.) Karel Soucek



Soucek died demonstrating the protected stunt barrel he developed.



8.) James F. Fixx



Fixx, who is credited with popularizing running and jogging as exercise, suffered a fatal heart attack while on his daily run.



9.) Horace Lawson Hunley



Hunley died aboard one of his unsuccessful attempts at a functioning submarine.



10.) Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier



de Rozier became the first fatality of an air crash while piloting an untethered air balloon, which he was one of the first to fly about a year earlier.



11.) Henry Fleuss



Fleuss died from the pure oxygen, which is toxic to humans under the pressure of water, he inhaled from the oxygen rebreather he invented.



12.) Fred Duesenberg



The German-American automobile pioneer died from the pneumonia he developed after getting into an accident in the car the bore his name.


(via izismile, Oddee)


Yikes. I think I might keep all of my genius ideas to myself now… and live FOREVER! That’s how that works, right? Hopefully, modern inventors think of safer ways to test their (possibly) genius devices. Dying for a failure just doesn’t seem like a good idea.


Share this post using the buttons below.


Read more: http://viralnova.com/creators-who-died-from-their-creations/




These Brilliant Creators Died As A Result Of Their Genius Inventions.

accident, creations, death, died, inventors

Monday, May 11, 2015

The Grave Was Good To These 5 Bodies. They"ve Barely Decayed At All.





When you die, your body will decay. Every once in a while, strange things happen and a body can remain more or less intact for hundreds or thousands of years.


These are 5 bodies that refuse to decay in any normal way, and they are going to creep you out.




1.) La Doncella.





A 15-year-old girl Incan girl was killed nearly 500 years ago as a religious sacrifice on the sides of a mountain in present-day Argentina. When researchers found her body in 1999, it was determined she died from a single, hard blow to the head.


The cold temperatures and dry, oxygen deficient air of the Andes helped persevere her body. While her name is lost to the ages, her nickname is “La Doncella,” which means “The Maiden.”




2.) Saint Betina Zita.





Zita was renowned for being a kind and caring person. People thought so much of her, that a small religious cult grew around her. She died in 1272. 300 years later, when her body was exhumed, it was found preserved. It was said she looked alive.


Since then, the body was on display and mummified quite a bit in the Basilica of San Frediano in Lucca, Italy. 




3.) Dashi-Dorzho Itigilov.






Itigilov was a Buddhist lama from Russia who died in 1927. The circumstances of his death are pretty remarkable. He asked his fellow lamas to begin the funeral procedures for him while he was alive, and also to meditate. He died while meditating in the lotus position as he colleagues prepare him for burial.


He also asked that his body be exhumed after several years. As of 2002, his body is still well preserved, if not a bit distorted because of the salt it was packed in.




4.) Saint Catherine Laboure.





Saint Catherine Laboure was allegedly visited many times by the Virgin Mary. According to the stories she told, Catherine placed her hands on Mary’s lap as she spoke to her in an empty chapel. When Catherine died in 1876, she received typical funeral rites, and remained buried until 1933.


In 1933, she was exhumed as part of the process of sainthood. What they found was Catherine’s perfectly persevered body. Her body is now on display in Paris.




5.) Lady Xin Zhui.




Xin Zhui was the wife of a Chinese nobleman during that Han dynasty. She lived a life of excessive luxury, which caught up to her in 163 BCE. She was morbidly obese and died of a heart attack. Those tragic circumstances are matched by the uncanny preservation of her body.


Researchers unearthed her in 1971, and found her skin was soft and her joints could still move. Creepy.


Via: Mental Floss


These bodies are pretty creepy. It’s weird to think about a body underground in total darkness and not decaying. I’m sure there’s a scientific explanation for each of these, but it’s still pretty strange.


Read more: http://viralnova.com/weird-preserved-bodies/




The Grave Was Good To These 5 Bodies. They"ve Barely Decayed At All.

ancient corpses, death, decomposing bodies, mummies, mummy