ice soap and water
With a scorpion, it would actually be a sting instead of a bite. The sting will likely be painful and swell a bit. It might go numb around the sting itself.
The scorpion poison goes to the heart and blocks all the arteries therefore stopping the blood to be pumped
The Oregon Trail during the 1800s could be a very dangerous place. Scorpion stings were common and were treated in a few different ways. Most often, an incision was made at the sting site and the poison was allowed to drain from the wound or sucked out, depending on the severity of the sting.It would probably be treated with incision and drainage to remove the venom; elevation, symptomatic management, rest, bleeding along with application of a herbal poultice...
Take scorpion venom and dissolve it with alcohol/water, dilute in a ratio of 9:1 and succuss (strike forcefully) 10 times, take a tenth portion of that and repeat dilution and succussion step 12 times, to create a 12X potency remedy. Take a portion immediately, save the rest for future emergency.
To help you guys out with the answer. It is known that the more slender the claws and fatter the tail of the scorpion the more venomous it is. Emperor Scorpions, scorpions with the largest claws, are known to be the least venomous scorpion. There sting rarely results in medical emergency unless allergic to bee stings or insect bites.as far as i know, the bark scorpion is the most venomous. its very small and brownish in color. though i dont know where it can be found you'll have to look that part up.
With a scorpion, it would actually be a sting instead of a bite. The sting will likely be painful and swell a bit. It might go numb around the sting itself.
The scorpion poison goes to the heart and blocks all the arteries therefore stopping the blood to be pumped
It would depend entirely on the type of scorpion. Some scorpions are really deadly, even to humans, while others just have a painful sting that is not really poisonous.
The Oregon Trail during the 1800s could be a very dangerous place. Scorpion stings were common and were treated in a few different ways. Most often, an incision was made at the sting site and the poison was allowed to drain from the wound or sucked out, depending on the severity of the sting.It would probably be treated with incision and drainage to remove the venom; elevation, symptomatic management, rest, bleeding along with application of a herbal poultice...
A scorpion
Scorpion
Take scorpion venom and dissolve it with alcohol/water, dilute in a ratio of 9:1 and succuss (strike forcefully) 10 times, take a tenth portion of that and repeat dilution and succussion step 12 times, to create a 12X potency remedy. Take a portion immediately, save the rest for future emergency.
Mortal Kombat Scorpion, without a doubt
No, because if it did the scorpion's stinger would probably pierce it and kill it.
definatatly scorpion!
its not possible for a camel to have scorpion features
probably scorpion