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Could
traces of puffer fish toxin explain the supposed existence of
Haiti's zombies? Luigi Garlaschelli unearths the evidence - for
and against
Zombie
fish eaters? Could traces of puffer fish toxin explain the supposed
existence of Haiti's zombies? Luigi Garlaschelli unearths the
evidence - for and against According to widespread Haitian beliefs,
voodoo sorcerers (bokors) would administer a 'magic powder' to
their victim. The victim would lapse into a state of such low
metabolic activity that he (or she) might appear clinically dead.
The poor soul would then be buried alive, only to be rescued hours
later by the sorcerer who dug him up, fed him an hallucinogenic
concoction, and sold him as a slave, often to sugar plantations.
If by some lucky chance (the bokor's death, divine intervention
etc) the zombie could free himself, he can still be spotted by
his glassy eyes, limited speech capability, nasal voice and slow
and 'goofy' movements. The existence of zombies is often taken
for granted by Haitian people, and 'zombification' is still considered
a crime in Haitian law: Article 264 forbids the administration
of drugs that can induce apparent death. If the victim is buried
thereafter, the crime is equated to homicide. But do zombies really
exist, or is all this just superstition and legend? And if they
do exist, are they misunderstood cases, or is there any pharmacological
rationale for the activity of the bokor's magic drugs? What is
the active molecule in the 'zombie powder'? In 1982 a young Harvard
ethnobotanist, Wade Davis, met Nathan Kline at the Rockland State
Research Institute of New York. Kline, a pioneer in the use of
tranquillisers, wanted Davis to go to Haiti and try to secure
a sample of that mysterious powder, which - despite his 30 years
of work in Haiti - he had never procured. Kline was particularly
excited because he believed that he had found, for the first time,
a real zombie: a man named Clairvius Narcisse, who claimed to
have been made a zombie 18 years before, and to have returned
to his village by freeing himself from slavery. Tetrodoxin Tetrodoxin
Davis visited the island several times and bought eight samples
of the supposed zombie powder from bokor witch doctors with whom
he had become familiar, also taking part in their grisly ceremonies.
On analysing these samples, Davis found that they contained a
number of ingredients, including fresh remains of human cadavers,
noxious toads, nettles, as well as parts of a puffer fish (Sphoeroides
testudineus) found in Haitian waters. It was this fish that puzzled
Davis, since puffer fish and the similar porcupine fish (Diodon
hystrix) are known to contain tetrodotoxin, a potent toxin that
can block the sodium channels between nerve endings and can cause
paralysis and death. Tetrodotoxin poisonings are not unfamiliar
in Japan (646 cases were reported from 1973 to 1983, but some
estimates suggest there may be up to 200 cases per year), because
puffer fish is the basis for fugu, an unusual seafood starter.
This dish must be prepared by licensed cooks, who remove all the
organs where the toxin is stored in the animal - skin, gonads,
liver and gut. This toxin is not made by the puffer fish itself,
but rather by epiphytic or symbiotic bacteria (like Shewanella
alga) growing on algae that the fish eats. Most intriguingly,
among the described symptoms of fugu poisoning is progressive
limb paralysis while maintaining consciousness. In Japan, however,
there are no reported cases of zombies. After Davis's first trip
to Haiti in 1982, he gave a sample of zombie powder to Leon Roizin,
a pathologist who had been studying the effect of drugs on the
central nervous system for 40 years. The results sparked a long
controversy. Davis cited them briefly, without giving any data,
in a paper in 1983, claiming that administering the powder to
rats and rhesus monkeys had induced paralysis in the animals,
while maintaining their central nervous system and heart activity.
In a personal communication, Davis stated: '3.5g of crude poison
might put a 73kg human into a comatose, cataleptic state'. However,
Roizin refused to comment further on this experiment, which he
had done informally as a favour to his friend Kline. The test
was never repeated, never published, and Roizin also refused to
have any further contact with Davis. Later he commented that he
was not sure whether some other kind of drug may have been added
to the samples. In 1984, Davis had a similar test repeated by
John Hartung, an anthropologist turned medical researcher at Downstate
Medical Center in Brooklyn. The powder was fed to rats, and it
was rubbed on the animals' skin, and injected intraperitoneally
(into the abdomen). He observed no effect. This second test was
not mentioned, not even as a personal communication, in Davis's
PhD dissertation in 1986 - an anthropology and ethnobotanic thesis,
for which no pharmacologists or toxicologists sat on the adjudicating
committee. In it, Davis mentioned again his first 1983 paper,
in the following terms: 'Laboratory tests have shown both the
presence of tetrodotoxin in the samples, and have indicated that
the powders when applied topically to rats and monkeys are biologically
active'. Interestingly, the cited paper does not contain analytical
evidence for the presence of the toxin, which was found in trace
amounts in only one sample. Tracking the subsequent analyses of
the various samples is tricky. Data appeared in a letter to the
journal Toxicon in 1986 by C. Y. Kao, also from Downstate Medical
Center in Brooklyn, and Takeshi Yasumoto of the Tohoku University
in Sendai, Japan, an authority on HPLC analysis of the toxin in
cases of fugu poisoning. Kao found no biological activity in the
samples that he received in 1984 from Davis, while Yasumoto found
less than 1.1µg of tetrodotoxin per gram of sample, and less in
others. They concluded that 'the widely circulated claim in the
lay press to the effect that tetrodotoxin is the causal agent
in the initial zombification process is without factual foundation'.
In his subsequent book The serpent and the rainbow, Davis again
cited Roizin, and Laurent Rivier at the University of Lausanne.
Rivier, however, informed Davis (in letters dated 1983 and 1985)
that he had found only traces of tetrodotoxin. In 1986 Rivier
sent part of the samples to Michael Lazdunski, head of a third
laboratory, the Biochemistry Centre at the University of Nice.
Doses this time turned out to be between 64ng and 20µg per gram
of sample. Davis explained such different results by noting that
the samples were inhomogeneous and strongly basic - such that
the drug would have decomposed during the extraction step performed
by Kao, leaving behind only insignificant traces of toxin. He
stated that the composition of the powder could vary, that the
zombification process is never sure and that the powder is not
supposed to be put into water. Kao's comments have always been
sharper; he was quoted as saying 'I feel I have been taken for
a ride', criticising Rivier and Davis for their instrumental methods
and the lack of standards. It seems clear that Davis, possibly
in good faith even if thoughtlessly, tried to back up his stimulating
thesis by weak evidence. Once depicted by the media as an ante
litteram Indiana Jones, Davis also wrote two books, of which The
serpent and the rainbow served as the basis for a horror movie
with the same title. A few ethnobothanists and anthropologists,
like Richard E. Schultes and Irven deVore at Harvard University,
rate Davis's global work as interesting, and excuse some barely
legal acts, such as the exhumation of a corpse, that Davis witnessed.
So are the zombies still a mystery? Possibly
the explanation is not simply a chemical and pharmacological one,
but is more complex and has its roots in a number of superstitions,
folklore, magic cults and misinterpretation. In Haiti, until a
few years ago, death was recognised even without medical certification,
and burial occurred within a short time due to the hot climate.
Thus, cases of apparent death with subsequent 'resuscitation'
might well have happened. Besides this, bodies are seldom buried,
but generally placed above ground in concrete family tombs, which
can be easily broken open. Some magic ceremonies of the voodoo
- like those witnessed by Davis - actually make use of parts of
corpses, such as skulls etc, that are rather easily available.
And again, during the Duvalier dictatorship regime, the most frightening
facets of the voodoo cults were exploited as a tool for social
control, and to cover up abductions, secret homicides and tortures.
Haitian people regard supposed zombies with sorrow and not, as
we would expect, with fright. Fear is restricted to the possibility
of being zombified oneself. In spite of the high population density
in Haiti, no one has ever seen an enslaved zombie on a secret
bokor's territory. They are only identified on their return home,
in those rare cases when they apparently escape from captivity.
The authors of a paper in The Lancet in 1997 report three supposed
zombies, returned to their families after years of absence. Clinical
(DNA fingerprinting and psychiatric) tests have been performed
on these persons, and their personal stories reconstructed by
interviewing their supposed relatives and so on. The authors'
conclusion was that: 'It is unlikely that there is a single explanation
for all zombies. Mistaken identification of a wandering, mentally
ill, stranger by bereaved relatives is the most likely explanation
People
with a chronic schizophrenic illness, brain damage or learning
disabilities are not uncommonly met with wandering in Haiti, and
they would be particularly likely to be identified as lacking
volition and memory which are characteristics of a zombie'. In
this multi-faceted picture, it seems certain that bokor sorcerers
do prepare repugnant concoctions and that they do perform awful
rites. Even though the 'chemical theory' of zombification cannot
be completely excluded, the efficacy of 'zombie powder' does not
appear to be corroborated by sufficient evidence. It is far more
likely that tetrodotoxin would poison a Japanese gourmet, instead
of a poor Haitian peasant.
This
article has been adapted with permission from La Chimica e l'Industria
(September 2001, number 7, p71)
Luigi Garlaschelli is a research scientist at
the department of organic chemistry, Università di Pavia, Via
Taramelli, 10, 27100 Pavia, Italy; and lecturer for organic chemistry
at the Università San Raffaele, Milan. e-mail: garlasch@chifis.unipv.it
Luigi
Garlaschelli
Frankenstein:
the science and the fiction
Chemistry
in Britain, nov. 2002
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On
a stormy night in June 1816, after having read a book of ghost
tales, five people each decided to write what we would now call
a thriller. They were staying at the house of Lord Byron, and
the group included Byron himself, his lover Claire, his personal
physician Polidori, the poet Percy Shelley and his wife Mary
(then 20 years old and Claire's step-sister). Two years later
Mary Shelley published Frankenstein: or the modern Prometheus,
a book that has sold in millions, is translated in umpteen languages
around the world and is the basis for several movies of the
same title. All of us must know the story of how scientist Victor
Frankenstein brought to life an unnamed monster by weird electrical
devices. In the scarce hints to the techniques used by Frankenstein,
Mary Shelley always uses the term 'chemical' for the instruments
Frankenstein would have used in his Promethean undertaking.
What was Mary Shelley thinking of? In her preface to the novel,
she speaks of galvanism. In well-known experiments in 1780,
Italian scientist Luigi Galvani made frog limbs contract by
touching them with thin metallic wires. As is clear from the
ensuing discussion with Alessandro Volta, the real cause of
those contractions was a potential generated by the contact
of two metals. In 1800 Volta constructed his electric pile with
zinc and silver disks, spaced by felt disks soaked in slightly
acidic water. This first source of continuous electric current
soon became famous, and Volta himself showed it to Napoleon
Bonaparte. In Britain, Humphry Davy used this battery for electrolytic
processes, and 10 years later he succeeded in isolating metallic
sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium. The wonders of electricity
astonished people, and Davy gave a number of successful public
lectures on scientific topics, gathering more than a thousand
people every time. (A young man in the audience asked Davy if
he could become his assistant: he was Michael Faraday, one of
the foremost scientists and experimentalists of his day.) In
1803 Davy invited Giovanni Aldini from the University of Bologna
to one of his public lectures. During a memorable night, Aldini,
nephew and follower of Galvani (who had died in 1798), applied
the electrodes of a voltaic battery to the body of an executed
convict that had been brought into the hall. The current made
the dead man's legs bend and a hand contract. It also generated
various facial expressions and made the eyes open. A member
of the audience fainted. Mary Shelley was only six at that time,
but that evening was remembered for a long time, and most likely
she later heard vivid descriptions of it. (About 12 years later,
Davy and his wife were members of the same literary circle of
Mary and Percy Shelley.) The young Mary grew up with scientists
and philosophers as family friends. Her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft,
was a writer and a feminist; her father was philosopher William
Godwin, and one of the family's closest friends was Erasmus
Darwin, a famous anthropologist - and grandfather of Charles.
In 1771 Erasmus Darwin had performed another gruesome experiment
- described in his book The Temple of Nature - that could have
influenced Mary. He had taken the vocal cords from a human corpse
and inserted them in a sort of mannequin head. Then, by means
of mechanical and electrical stimuli, he had succeeded in obtaining
sounds quite similar to a human voice. In Frankenstein, some
of the sentences uttered by Professor Waldman (Victor Frankenstein's
chemistry professor at the University of Ingolstadt) are taken,
nearly verbatim, from texts by Davy, including A discourse:
introduction to a course of lectures on chemistry (1802) and
Elements of chemical philosophy, I (1812). Mary Shelley considered
her novel quite different from the usual fantasy ones; it presented
hints taken from a surreal - but not totally impossible - science,
and depicted them within a plausible setting. For these reasons,
Frankenstein has been considered the first science fiction novel.
We can find in it the sources of plots that would be later exploited
and become popular: the difficult communication between individuals
from different origins; their reciprocal fear and their final
clash; the bright and lonely scientist whose research takes
him into territory where others don't dare to venture; an artificial
intelligence that hurls itself against its human creator; knowledge
that, beyond a certain threshold, turns itself into a nemesis.
Born from an unusual mixture of 19th century positivism and
of romanticism, Frankenstein's myth owes its appeal to other
factors as well. A man who wants to steal immortality from God
and recreate life seems to be a recurrent literary archetype,
encountered in Pygmalion's statue, in the Golem legend, even
in present day Blade Runner droids, and in Isaac Asimov's robots.
But Frankenstein's creature, like these, at the end suffers
for not being fully human, for being discriminated against as
different, for not receiving the love that every conscious creature
maybe has a right to get.
Further
reading
A. K. Mellor, Mary Shelley: her life, her fiction, her monsters;
pp105-106.
New York: Methuen,1988. R. P. J. Rooney, J. Chem. Ed., 1986,
63, 739;
V. Kumat and L. Milewski, ibid, 1985, 62, 397; C. J. Thoman,
ibid, 1998, 75, 495. C. Goulding, J. Roy. Soc. Med., 2002, 95,
257.
See also 'The Reanimators', Fortean Times, October 2000 and
references cited therein: www.forteantimes.com/articles/139_reanimators.shtml
Further reading
W. Booth, Science, 1988, 240, 274. E. W. Davis, J. Ethnopharmacol.,
1983, 9, 85.
E. W. Davis, The serpent and the rainbow. New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1985.
E. W. Davis, Passage of darkness: the ethnobiology of the Haitian
zombie. Chapel Hill: University of Carolina Press, 1988.
T. Yasumoto and C. Y. Kao, Toxicon, 1986, 24 (8), 747; C. Benedek
and L. Rivier, ibid, 1989, 27 (4), 473;
T. Yasumoto and C. Y. Kao, ibid, 1990, 28 (2), 129.
R. Littlewood and C. Douyon, The Lancet, 1997, 350, 1094.
La Chimica e l'Industria, September 2001, 7, p71
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