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(3)It was over 882 feet long. That's almost three football fields. It also weighed 52,310 tons. (4)One of the smokestacks didn't work. Only three of the four smoke stacks were actually functional. The extra one was just to make the ship look more impressive.
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(2)It was definitely not a one-man job. It took 3,000 Harland & Wolff shipbuilders to construct the ship
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30 Fascinating Details About the Titanic That You Probably Never Knew There are quite a few things James Cameron left out. One hundred and eight years ago, on April 15, 1912, a giant luxury passenger ship deemed to be "unsinkable" hit an iceberg and sank off the coast of Newfoundland. Though it claimed more than 1,500 lives in total, it would take 73 years for the ship's wreckage to finally be found — and still many more years to uncover the full story of the tragedy. Now, over a century later, the Titanic is still one of the most fascinating stories in history, and has inspired countless movies, books, and research about its tragic and mysterious tale. But how much do we really know about the secrets of the Titanic and those on board? To honor the 108th anniversary of one of the most famous disasters in history, we've gathered 35 of the most mind-blowing facts about the Titanic, including details you definitely didn't see in the movie. (1) It didn't come cheap. The ship cost $7.5 million to build. Fun Fact: James Cameron's 1997 movie about the disaster had a production budget of $200 million.
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Two things ![]() |
Chanchit:Didn't you see it? ![]() |
Scaphism Scaphism Death For sheer, delirious, nauseating horror, scaphism may be one of the worst execution methods ever devised. Practiced by the Ancient Persians, starting around 500 B.C., it saw the victim placed inside a hollowed-out log or narrow boat, their hands and feet tied to each end. The victim was then forced to ingest a mixture of milk and honey until they uncontrollably voided their bowels, at which point their skin was smeared with more milk and honey before they were left exposed in the sun and surrounded by their own feces and vomit. It was at this point that the insects would descend. Stinging and biting insects like wasps and ants would torture the victim, but worse, others would crawl inside the unprotected orifices of the subject and lay eggs, eating them alive from the inside out. With the ration of milk and honey — and sometimes water — repeated at daily intervals, the victim had little chance of dying of thirst or hunger. Instead, they succumbed to tortured madness, experiencing the agonizing, nightmare crawl of thousands of insects on their skin, burrowing into their eyes and ears and nose, filling their mouths, while worms and parasites bred in the filth at the bottom of the boat and squirmed up into their bowels. Death would eventually be caused by a combination of exposure and the massive infections caused by both the insects, and the fecal matter smeared into the wounds. One account of such an execution by the Greek historian Plutarch claimed that it took the victim 17 whole days to die. N.B there's a video on youtube about this OH WELL GO FOR IT AT UR OWN peril!
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History’s Worst Execution Methods: Flaying Flaying Alive Flaying — better known as “skinning alive” — has a long and grotesque history. Records of the practice exist as far back as the Neo-Assyrian Empire (beginning in 911 B.C.), but it has cropped up in most civilizations at one time or another, including Medieval Europe (where it tended to be used as a punishment for traitors) and in the ritual human sacrifices made by the Aztecs in Mexico (the Aztecs, at least, are believed to have skinned the body after the sacrifice had been made). Various techniques have been utilized in the many different cultures in which flaying has been employed, but the basis remains the same: Slowly, excruciatingly slicing the skin from the body while keeping the victim alive for as long as possible (and when feasible, removing the skin intact). Rendering Of Flaying Wikimedia Commons Carvings from the Assyrian period show the process beginning with incisions to the thighs or buttocks, while the European method — pictured above — shows it starting with the skin being torn from the feet and lower legs. Chinese Emperors Sun Hao, Fu Sheng, and Gao Heng ordered the skin to be peeled from their victims’ faces. Death would normally come as a result of massive blood loss and shock, but in the unfortunate cases where expert flayers were used, the victim could be kept alive in a state of perpetual agony for several days before finally succumbing to their hopelessly infected wounds.
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Bamboo Torture Bamboo Torture Forcing thin shards of bamboo under the fingernails has long been cited as an interrogation method, but bamboo has been used to creatively — and slowly — execute a person, too. Allegedly used by the Japanese on American prisoners of war, it saw the victim tied down to a frame over a patch of newly sprouting bamboo plants. One of the fastest-growing plants in the world, capable of up to three feet of growth in 24 hours, the sharp-tipped plants would slowly pierce the skin of the victim — and then continue to grow. The end result was death by gradual, continuous, multiple impalements, the equivalent of being dropped on a bed of sharpened stakes in terrible slow motion. Sharp Bamboo Wikimedia Commons Despite the practice having roots in the former areas of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and Siam (now Thailand) in the 19th century, there are no proven instances of it having been used during WWII. It’s certainly possible, however, and it has been shown that the technique, among the worst execution methods ever, works: A 2008 episode of MythBusters found that bamboo was capable of penetrating a human-sized lump of ballistic gelatin over the course of three days.
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Worst Execution Methods: Rat Torture Rats Torture Image Source: Tumblr As recently depicted in Game Of Thrones, rat torture is a method ingenious in its disgusting simplicity. In its most basic form, a bucket containing live rats is placed on the exposed torso of the victim, and heat applied to the base of the bucket. The rats, crazy with fear from the heat, tear and gnaw their way into the abdomen of the victim, clawing and ripping through skin, flesh, organs, and intestines in their quest to escape. Possessing the most powerful biting and chewing motion of any rodent, rats are able to make short work of a human stomach. Along with the unimaginable pain, the victim would also suffer the sick horror of feeling the large, filthy creatures writhing around inside their guts as they died. While associated with Elizabethan England — where the Tower of London was said to have housed a “Dungeon of Rats,” a pitch black room below high water mark that would draw in rats from the River Thames to torment the room’s inhabitants — the practice has been used far more recently. General Pinochet is said to have employed the technique during his dictatorship of Chile (1973-1990), while reports from Argentina during the National Reorganization Process in the late 1970s and early ’80s claimed victims were subjected to a version in which live rats — or sometimes spiders — were inserted into the subject’s body via a tube in the rectum or vagina.
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History’s Worst Execution Methods: The Roman Candle Torches Of Nero Wikimedia Commons Many of the very worst execution methods ever devised involve fire — from burning witches at the stake in medieval Britain to roasting criminals alive in the searing metal insides of the brazen bull in Ancient Greece — but few match the sheer lack of humanity as the Roman Candle. Roman Candle Image Source: RealChurchHistory A rumored favorite of the mad Roman Emperor Nero, this method saw the subject tied to a stake and smeared with flammable pitch (tree or plant resin), then set ablaze, slowly burning to death from the feet up. What sets this above the many other similar methods is the fact that the victims were sometimes lined up outside to provide the lighting for one of Nero’s evening parties.
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Being Hanged, Drawn, And Quartered Hanged Drawn Quartered Loyset Liédet/ Wikimedia Commons A prisoner being hanged, drawn, and quartered in France. First recorded in England during the 13th century, this unusually extreme — even for the time — mode of execution was made the statutory punishment for treason in 1351. Though it was intended to be an act of such barbarous severity that no one would ever risk committing a treasonous act, there were nevertheless plenty of recipients over the next 500 years. The process of being hanged, drawn and quartered began with the victim being dragged to the site of execution while strapped to a wooden panel, which was in turn tied to a horse. They would then experience a slow hanging, in which, rather than being dropped to the traditional quick death of a broken neck, they would instead be left to choke horribly as the rope tore up the skin of their throat, their body weight dragging them downwards. Guy Fawkes Execution National Portrait Library/ Wikimedia Commons Guy Fawkes being executed for the Gunpowder Plot. Some had the good fortune to die at this stage, including infamous Gunpowder Plot conspirator Guy Fawkes, who ensured a faster death by leaping from the gallows. Once half strangled, the drawing would begin. The victim would be strapped down and then slowly disemboweled, their stomachs sliced open and their intestines and other major organs hacked apart and pulled — “drawn” — from the body. The genitals would often be mutilated and ripped from between their legs. Those unlucky enough to still be alive at this point might witness their organs burned in front of them, before they were finally decapitated. Once death had finally claimed them, the recipient’s body would be carved into four pieces — or “quartered” — and the parts sent to prominent areas of the country as a warning to others. The head would often be taken to the infamous Tower of London, where it would be impaled on a spike and placed on the walls, “for the mockery of London.”
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Keelhauling Engraved depiction of keelhauling. 1898 Walking the plank might not be the most pleasant of deaths, but it seems moderately more humane than the other favored maritime punishment of keelhauling. A punishment that often ended in death due to the severity of the wounds sustained (or was simply carried out until the point of death), it saw the victim, legs weighted and suspended from a rope, dropped from the bow of the ship and then rapidly pulled underwater along the length of the hull — and over the keel (the beam that runs longitudinally down the center of the underside of the ship), hence the name — to the stern. Keelhauling Painting Wikimedia Commons The keelhauling of the ship’s surgeon of admiral Jan van Nes Lieve Pietersz. Verschuier. 1660 to 1686. In the age of wooden sailing ships, the hull of a vessel would normally be coated in a thick layer of barnacles, whose shells could be rock hard and razor sharp. As the drowning sailor was yanked relentlessly through the salt water, these protrusions would strip the skin from his body, gouging out raw chunks of flesh and even, by some accounts, tearing off whole limbs or severing the head. If the sailor was still alive, they might be hung from the mast for 15 minutes before going in again. In some cases, the victim would have an oil-soaked sponge — containing a breath of air — stuffed into their mouth to prevent a “merciful” drowning. Employed mostly by the Dutch and the French from the 1500s until it was abolished in 1853, accounts of its use date back as far as Greece in 800 B.C.
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Impalement Impalement Impalement Death Most famously used by Vlad the Impaler, 15th-century ruler of Wallachia (in present-day Romania) and inspiration for Count Dracula, the act of impalement has a long, grim history. While images tend to depict people skewered through the midsection and then held aloft — in a manner that would almost certainly bring about a rapid death — the real process was a much longer, horrifically drawn-out ordeal. Traditionally, the stake would be partially sharpened and planted, point up, in the ground. The victim would then be placed over the spike as it was inserted partway into the rectum or vagina. As their own body weight dragged them further onto the pole, the semi-greased wooden stake would force its way up through their body, piercing organs with an agonizing slowness as it eventually penetrated the entire torso, finally tearing an exit wound through the skin of the shoulder, neck or throat. Drawing Of Impalement Wikimedia Commons The earliest records of the torture come from 1772 B.C. in Babylon, where King Hammurabi ordered a woman be executed in this way for killing her husband. But its use continued until as recently as the 20th century, when the Ottoman government employed the technique during the Armenian genocide of 1915-1923. According to some accounts, it could take the victim — exposed, bleeding, and writhing in tormented agony — as long as eight whole days to die.
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The bloody eagle wing Blood Eagle A technique ascribed to ancient Norse warriors, the blood eagle mixed brutality and poetic imagery in a way that only the Vikings could. First, the victim’s back would be hacked open and the skin ripped apart, exposing the spinal column. The ribs would then be snapped from the spine and forcibly bent backwards until they faced outwards from the body, forming a pair of bloody, shattered eagle’s wings. As a horrifying finale, the lungs would then be pulled from the body cavity and coated with stinging salt, causing eventual death by suffocation. There is some question as to whether this technique was ever actually used as the only accounts come from Norse literature. Several scholars claim that the act we know of today is simply a result of poor translating, and misunderstands the strong association of the eagle with blood and death in Norse imagery. That said, every account is consistent in that in each case, the victim is a nobleman being punished for murdering his father. The good news for any poor soul who might have suffered this indignity? The agony and blood loss from the initial wounds would probably have caused them to pass out long before the lungs were removed from their bodies.
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Whether involving rats, spikes, or boiling oil, the worst execution methods ever invented prove that humans have mastered the art of torture and death. Worst Execution Methods If the last few thousand years of human history have shown us to be good at one thing, it’s the art of inflicting painful, humiliating death on one another. Whether using ravenous animals, scorching temperatures, or endless variations of sharp, pointed implements, the ingenuity that has gone into the act of death by torture is genuinely shocking. You’ll need a strong stomach to make it through this list of the worst execution methods ever used: Here comes the bad ass method Worst Execution Methods: Boiling To Death A slow and agonizing punishment, this method traditionally saw the victim gradually lowered — feet-first — into boiling oil, water, or wax (although uses of boiling wine and molten lead have also been recorded). If the shock of the pain did not render them immediately unconscious, the person would experience the excruciating sensation of their outer layers of skin, utterly destroyed by immersion burns, dissolving right off their body, followed by the complete breakdown of the fatty tissue, boiling away beneath. Martyr Burned In Oil It seems safe to assume that such a horrendous fate, one of the worst execution methods ever devised, would be reserved for the foulest of murderers, but historical documents refute this. Emperor Nero is said to have dispatched thousands of Christians in this manner, while in the Middle Ages, the main recipients of the punishment were not killers or rapists but coin forgers, particularly in Germany and the Holy Roman Empire. In Britain, meanwhile, King Henry VIII introduced the practice for executing those who used poison to commit murder. Shockingly, the practice is believed to have been carried out as recently as 2002, when the government of Uzbekistan, led by Islam Karimov, was alleged to have tortured several suspected terrorists to death in this manner.
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ashybabs:Lol |
temmienewells:All this bloggers sef eehn. |
mujibson:What the dude said was actually true,mine has started all over again.
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On August 15th, 2016 a then 19-year-old Florida State University student named Austin Harrouff allegedly killed a 59 and 53-year-old couple outside of their home in Tequesta, Florida. The college student made international headlines after not only fatally stabbing his victims, but also biting off parts of their faces. At the time of the attack, the assailant believed that he was 'half-man, half-dog' according to a 2017 interview. Harrouff, now 22, was living with bipolar disorder and acute manic episodes with psychotic features, according to psychologist Dr. Phillip Resnick. Harrouff "“had the delusion that he could run ‘super fast’ because he was ‘half-man, half dog.’ He believed that other dogs’ hair was attaching to his face,'" said Resnick in a 38-page mental health report. austin-harrouff-ap Back in 2017, Harrouff was interviewed by another known psychologist, Dr. Phil McGraw. Investigators had initially believed that Harrouff may have been on the synthetic street drug, Flakka, however, a toxicology report by the FBI concluded that he had "no designer drugs in his system and only trace amounts of marijuana." Harrouff's trial is scheduled for November 4th, 2019 and he's facing "two counts of first-degree murder with a weapon for the deaths of Mishcon and Stevens, one charge of burglary of a dwelling with assault or battery while armed for breaking into their garage, and one charge of attempted first-degree murder with a weapon for attacking and injuring the couple's neighbor, Jeffrey Fisher."
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[img][/img]Bye Bye Chromosomes Ouchi was rushed to a hospital, however, he was in extremely critical condition upon arrival. His chromosomes were wiped out, his white blood cells plummeted to zero, and he had severe burns covering his entire body. First of It's Kind Ouchi's condition was the first of it's kind and his radiation exposure was comparable to the victims at the hypocenter of the Hiroshima atomic bombing. The hospital had never seen anyone survive this kind of exposure and the doctors used him to run a series of tests. During those 83 days, Ouchi underwent the first transfusion of peripheral stem cells, as well as several blood transfusions and skin transplants. However, neither the transfusions or transplants could keep his bodily fluids from leaking out of his pores. During the first week of experiments, Ouchi had the consciousness to tell the doctors “I can’t take it any more… I am not a guinea pig," but they continued to treat him for 11 more weeks. At the time of his death, his heart had stopped for 70 minutes and the doctors chose this time not to resurrect him. Unbreakable Record To this day, Ouchi holds the record for the most radiation experienced by a surviving person, however, this is not an accomplishment that his family likely celebrates. His case of malpractice by these doctors is extremely horrific and one of the greatest examples of human torture of the 20th century.
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Mr. Ouchi During the 1999 accident, there were three workers who were affected by gamma and neutron radiation poisoning at the scene. One of those workers was named Hisashi Ouchi and he was exposed to the highest amount of radiation ever sustained by a human being. gory image below Immediate Consequences Immediately after the gamma and neutron radiation began to emit from the uranyl nitrate solution, Ouchi began feeling nauseous and started vomiting. However, as you may have guessed, this was just the start of what he was about to endure.
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Double Trouble Tōkai, Ibaraki is a small village in Northern Japan. It is best known for hosting two of the worst nuclear accidents in history. The first occurred in 1997, at the Dōnen nuclear plant. Then in 1999, there was a critical radiation accident at the JCO plant. oh well! It all started in the image below
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Man Used as Human Guinea Pig After Radiation Disaster *WARNING* the images you're about to see are extremely disturbing, however, the story of Hisashi Ouchi is one of 100% truth. He not only experienced some of the highest levels of extreme radiation exposure but lived to "tell the tale" for a whopping 83 days before he eventually passed away. His death was considered to be one of the most horrific in modern history and his story exposes the terrifying abuse of the medical industry. Be prepared for the nightmares that will inevitably ensue after you read his tragic story and let us know what you think of this unbelievable event that took place a mere 21 years ago. Source: Quora,inkedmag.
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Oh well! The op will be missed. Really enjoyed the thread. Danny you did a good job but everyone is entitled to his or her own choice without sanctions. Enjoy ur peace man Pls if anybody get any interesting travel thread should recommend pls pls pls.
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espn:Punish him for what?! Sorry to ask but did you actually read the article,abi na headline you read?
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DaudaTheSexyGuy:What if it's wide like the river Niger? You never can tell of girls of 'nawadays'. |
360clips:
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mujibson:Sure,i will... |
mujibson:Mine is almost same with urs. Lemme check out what happens in the next few days .
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Richdee1:Spreads mat and grabs popcorn. Baba thanks for the mention. ![]() |
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