you better find because doctors don't know what there doing
Forceps and possibly the spot where the bullet penetrated the skin
The first metal detector was used to find a bullet. These days X-rays are normally used.
In the strictest definition of the word deflect, yes it can. However, it might be more correct to say that the wind can affect the trajector and path of a bullet.
If the bullet were shot perfectly vertically in a vacuum, it would reach its maximum altitude, then fall at a velocity of 32 ft/sec/sec. The terminal velocity would depend upon the altitude reached by the bullet, which in turn depends upon the caliber and load of bullet shot.
it depends where, what angle . if the bullet is led no it will splatter on a bone but it might go in the tissue and it depends how far you are up close it will go right though you! but if you were standing on a 4 story building and a person shoots from the ground you, will be like a paint ball it depends where, what angle . if the bullet is led no it will splatter on a bone but it might go in the tissue and it depends how far you are up close it will go right though you! but if you were standing on a 4 story building and a person shoots from the ground you, will be like a paint ball
Forceps and possibly the spot where the bullet penetrated the skin
The first metal detector was used to find a bullet. These days X-rays are normally used.
The profession a person chooses will be based on their beliefs and values. Some might see educating others as important while some might be more apt to be doctors.
Probably not. What killed Garfield was the ineptitude of his doctors who refused to believe that germs existed and rejected Joseph Lister's advocacy of sterilization. This is especially the case since the doctor who appointed himself the head of Garfield's medical team, D.W. Bliss, explicited rejected Dr. Lister's methodology as a bunch of hokum. The first doctors who treated Garfield on site at the Baltimore-Potomac train station laid him down on the dirty station floor and poked around in his wound with unwashed hands, likely causing from the get-go the infection that ultimately killed him. Not only did they not make sure their hands were clean, they subsquently repeatedly used unsterilized instruments to poke inside his wound. Moreover, the bullet in Garfield's body was not in a fatal position, lodged as it was in some fatty tissue behind his pancreas. He would likely have been able to survive with the bullet in his body. Having an x-ray and knowing where the bullet was lodged in his body might have prevented the doctors from probing his open wounds more than they did, but it would probably not have prevented his death via infection.
I don't think I know. It might be lodged some were in my brain, but if it is, I can't remember.
I don't think I know. It might be lodged some were in my brain, but if it is, I can't remember.
A Burger might get lodged in their throat causing them to suffercate and die. A common fatality in fat people 1/100 people die from getting pizza, burgers or kebab lodged in their throat causing them to die.
An object might be lodged in the Filter, Pour some water and shake it a bit, the obect might come out
Yes, a bullet can be shot with no gun. A bullet does not need a lot of speed to kill someone. Say someone threw a bullet to the ground, it might bounce back up and hit you, thus causing you to die or be injured
Might be Swaged Semi-Wad Cutter
what do you think the person density in the persons body might be?
it might be that the other persons body is no longer accepting the cure... there are cases like that.