infection
There's no right answer to your question. There are a lot of variables, such as: * where did the bullet hit the body? * what was the velocity of the bullet when it hit? * was the bullet a hollowpoint or full metal jacket * what was the angle of the bullet's trajectory, etc...... If a .45 bullet hit someone in the hand, it would likely pass through, even if it hit a metacarpal bone. If a .45 bullet hit someone in the hip (say, from right to left), it would likely stay in the body If a .45 bullet hit someone in the abdomen, and hit nothing but intestines & muscles, it would likely pass through. Ballistics are strange and not always predictable. If you clarify your question, I can give you a better answer.
No. Space junk consists of fragments of spacecraft left in space. Saturn is a planet.
Entering the left chest and exiting the right chest, a bullet would probably pass through both lungs, and may also pass through the heart.
* Heterogeneous. (All different sizes). * Jagged fragments. * Angular rock. * Unsorted. * Unstratified.
The process in which rock fragments freeze to the bottom of a glacier and are then carried away when the glacier moves is called plucking. After the last ice age, stranded ice blocks left behind by the continental glacier melted and formed kettles.
infection
The bullet entered his body at a point between the navel and left nipple. It passed through the stomach, nicked the left kidney and lodged in the pancreas.
They dont need to take the bullet out in many cases. Doctors will evaluate if it is safe to remove the bullet or not. It is not unusual to hear a bullet lodged in to a skull or spinal cord to be left in the body. Due to friction between the bullet and barrel plus the atmosphere by the time bullet reaches the body its already too hot and perfectly sterilised. There is no risk of infection from the bullet. Lead poisoning can only happen when there is oxidation. As oxigen can not reach the lead in the body it is safe to leave it in rather than causing more damage to the body trying to take it out.
Abraham Lincoln was shot in the back of the head.
The left side of the brain is more less controlled by the right side.
There's no right answer to your question. There are a lot of variables, such as: * where did the bullet hit the body? * what was the velocity of the bullet when it hit? * was the bullet a hollowpoint or full metal jacket * what was the angle of the bullet's trajectory, etc...... If a .45 bullet hit someone in the hand, it would likely pass through, even if it hit a metacarpal bone. If a .45 bullet hit someone in the hip (say, from right to left), it would likely stay in the body If a .45 bullet hit someone in the abdomen, and hit nothing but intestines & muscles, it would likely pass through. Ballistics are strange and not always predictable. If you clarify your question, I can give you a better answer.
A peson that fought in the Civil War and got bullet shot in his left cheek and the bullet came out of his left ear.
McKinley was shot at Buffalo, New York at the Pan American Exposition on September 6th, 1901 at 4:07pm. The bullet entered his body at a point between the navel and left nipple. It passed through the stomach, nicked the left kidney and lodged in the pancreas.
The cast of One Bullet Left - 2003 includes: Ballett Basel as Themselves Delia Mayer
Marks, or striations on a bullet are made from the bullet running against the metal of the gun. The barrel of the gun determines whether the bullet curves to the left or right.
It means somebody was waiting to shoot you and you never appeared so they left a bullet to scare you.
That would depend on the mass of the bullet, the bullet's velocity when it left the barrel of the gun, and from how high up the bullet was fired from.