Stubbins Ffirth, a doctor training in Philadelphia during the 1800s, formed the hypothesis that yellow fever was not an infectious disease, and proceeded to test it on himself. Both animals soon died because of tissue rejection - but that did not stop Demikhov from creating 19 more over the next 15 years. The second head would lap at milk, even though it did not need nourishment - and though the milk then dribbled down the neck from its disconnected oesophagus. The head of a puppy had been grafted onto the neck of an adult German shepherd. Vladimir Demikhov, a surgeon from the Soviet Union, revealed his surgical creation of a two-headed dog in 1954. Taking a model of a female turkey, they progressively removed body parts until the males lost interest.Įven when all that remained was a head on a stick, the male turkeys remained turned on. Martin Schein and Edgar Hale, of Pennsylvania State University, devoted themselves to studying the sexual behaviour of turkeys in the 1960s, and discovered that the birds are not choosy. Mr Boese, however, has another explanation: "'If I stop biting my nails,’ they probably thought, ‘the strange man will go away.’” It seemed to work: by the end of the summer, 40 per cent of the boys had stopped biting their nails. While they were asleep, he played them a record of a voice saying: “My fingernails taste terribly bitter.” When the record player broke down, he stood in the dormitory repeating the phrase himself. In 1942 Lawrence LeShan, of the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, attempted subliminally to influence boys into stopping biting their fingernails. The state of California, however, refused permission, for fear that it would have to release McMonigle if the technique worked. He experimented by placing corpses on a see-saw to circulate the blood, while injecting adrenalin and anticoagulants.Īfter apparently successful experiments on strangled dogs, he found a condemned prisoner, Thomas McMonigle, who was prepared to become a human guinea pig. Robert Cornish, of the University of California at Berkeley, believed in the 1930s that he had perfected a way of raising the dead. “They look like members of a strange cult preparing to offer a sacrifice to the Great God of the Experiment,” Mr Boese wrote. The pictures, however, look quite bizarre. While all hesitated, and some swore or cried, most agreed to do so - showing the ease with which most people bow to authority. He then asked each volunteer to decapitate a white rat.
To exaggerate expressions, he drew lines on volunteers’ faces with burnt cork, before asking them to smell ammonia, listen to jazz, look at pornography or place their hands in a bucket of frogs. In 1924 Carney Landis, of the University of Minnesota, set out to investigate facial expressions of disgust.
Leuba’s wife, however, was caught some months later bouncing the boy on her knee while laughing and saying: “Bouncy, bouncy.” By the time the boy was seven, he was laughing when tickled - but that did not stop Leuba trying the experiment again on his sister. He tested it on his son - the family was forbidden from laughing in relation to tickling when he was present. In the 1930s Clarence Yeuba, a Professor of Psychology at Antioch College in Ohio, formed the hypothesis that people learn to laugh when tickled, and that the response is not innate. It revealed that fear of imminent death indeed causes soldiers to make more mistakes than usual when filling in forms. They were actually unwitting participants in an experiment: the plane was not crippled at all. They were then required to fill in insurance forms before the crash - ostensibly so the Army was not financially liable for any deaths or injuries.
The scientists claimed in their defence that they had not expected this to happen - two of them had taken plenty of acid themselves, they said.Īnother 1960s experiment, in which ten soldiers on a training flight were told by the pilot that the aircraft was disabled, and about to ditch in the ocean. The result was a public relations disaster: Tusko died. The idea was to determine whether the hallucinogenic drug could induce musth - the state of temporary madness in which male elephants become aggressive. I find them all particularly entertaining, I hope you do too.Ī curiosity-led experiment from the 1960s, in which Warren Thomas decided to inject an elephant named Tusko with 297 milligrams of LSD - about 3,000 times the typical human dose - to see what would happen. The following 10 science experiments are all real they are based on sudden and insane stokes of genius. Scientists walk on the thin line between reality and fiction, brilliance and madness. I am heavily loaded with work today, so here's an article taken from the New Scientist magazine. Information from the novel "Elephants on Acid and Other Bizarre Experiments" by Alex Boase.