yes
Heel ...i suppose The legend of Achilles has it that he was dipped into the river Styx by his mother Thetis in order to make him invulnerable. His heel wasn't covered by the water and he was later killed by an arrow wound to his heel.
Achilles had a small wound in his heel.
He actually did it himself in the book of Genesis. Genesis 3:15 says, And I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your offspring and her offspring. He will crush your head, and you will strike him in the heel." A heel wound can be recovered but a head wound is deadly. Satan wounded Jesus in the heel but very soon Jesus will crush Satan's head destroying him for ever.
3 years
I can't answer that completely, but I can say, in the Illiad, Achilles died of a wound to his heel.
The story of Achilles is featured in Greek mythology and focuses on his role in the Trojan War. Achilles is a skilled warrior who was invulnerable except for his heel. He is known for his bravery in battle, his close friendship with Patroclus, and his eventual death from a wound to his heel inflicted by Paris.
The depth of penetration is greater than the recommended 2.0mm for heel incision devices. Run the risk of nerve damage. In addition, 2.8mm lancet will not produce enough blood for the PKU, etc. testing requirements, Lastly, a puncture wound is typically of "lower quality sample" due to the puncture vs incision wound type.
i think you can because if you swim in a swimming pool it helps your scab or scrp heel idk about deep wounds i gess if the wounds are not that serious
It is your weakest piont. According to the legend, Achilles' mother dipped him into a miraculous water when he was a child holding him by his heel. This way Achilles became nearly invulnerable. Knowing this, the Trojan prince Paris shot him in the heel with a poisoned arrow, and Achilles died.
Akihilleus is Achilles. Akihilleus is just another way of spelling Achilles, because the Greeks did not have the "letter" for "k". Achilles is a Greek hero who dies of a wound from an arrow in his heel.
The left heel was Achilles week heel.
The time it takes for a gunshot wound to travel from the thigh to the heel can vary significantly based on multiple factors such as the type of firearm, bullet caliber, distance, and the angle of the shot. Generally, a bullet can travel at speeds ranging from 800 to 1,200 feet per second. Therefore, if the distance between the thigh and heel is approximately 2 feet, it could take just a fraction of a second for a bullet to traverse that distance. However, it's important to note that the actual impact and consequences of such a wound would be immediate and potentially life-threatening, requiring urgent medical attention.