chemistry.org — Clairvius Narcisse was declared dead. 18 years later, in 1980, a shuffling, vacant-eyed man identified himself as, Clairvius. He told a fantastic tale of being dug up from his grave, beaten to his senses, and led away to work as a slave on a remote sugar plantation. The authentic ?zombie powder? was shown to produce a death like coma.
Aug 13, 2006 View in Crawl 4
usherzxAug 14, 2006
i'm feelin' it abbott. niceso heres the deal.
fatalvoicesAug 14, 2006
Thats a great article, that would suck though! Be quite a cool story to tell at a party though. All the zombies need is a good cup of coffee.
coitAug 14, 2006
Guess they don't embalm in Haiti, eh?
wurzelgummageAug 14, 2006
That sounds like a good title for a Dilbert book.
bobothnAug 14, 2006
digg.brains.com that is it right?
astrotrainAug 14, 2006
You need to sepereate the brain from the body... seperating the brain from the body prevents the zombie from doing any damage.
barryigginsAug 14, 2006
The book is great. The author is Wade Davis, the ethno-botanist who identified the primary active drug in the poison as tetrodoxin. He also happens to be a fantastic writer: a perfect blend of scientific info, spellbinding adventure, and poetic descriptive style. Unfortunately, as much cannot be said of the movie; ironically, it all too readily indulges all of the stereotypes and prejudices about Haitian people and their religion that Davis took such great pains to dispel.
chileangodAug 15, 2006
hey.. didnt know i had an audiance :)
batmanxmosherDec 17, 2008
sorry, he wouldn't be bruised, tetrodoxin, completely restricts blood flow, and bruising is caused by blood rushing to one area because it thinks the wound is bleeding and thus tries to repair it.
batmanxmosherDec 17, 2008
My favorite is "Blades don't need reloading"
sandraprinsloo1Apr 18, 2009
Fantastically ghoulish.<a class="user" href="http://youfantastic.com/">http://youfantastic.com/</a>