Originally posted by Robert
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However, we will not be able to find an exact answer to these questions. And that is because we are not allowed to see exactly how the ground was shaped underneath Nichols, the exact angling of the slope towards the gutter, etcetera.
Not that I think that this is much of a problem. The solution to the relative lack of blood in the street lies in a combination of the volume of boood that was spilt from the neck, the amount of time that she bled and the fact that much of the blood was soaked into her ulster.
If a huge amount of blood had exited her neck in a short time, the the pool would have been large. It was not. It therefore applies that either A/ Only a smallish amount of blood exited her via the neck, or B/ The ulster was quite effective in soaking the blood up, or C/ a combination of the two did the trick.
What is of interest here is the obesravtions made of the PC:s. I have one such observation lined up especiaaly for you, Robert, from the Illustrated Police News, Neil speaking:
Witness: There was a pool of blood just where her neck was lying. The blood was then running from the wound in her neck.
Running! Ouch! NOT "oozing". So we have two articles speaking of running, both quoting ad verbatim!
Anyhow, this is what Neil saw. A pool of blood - and that would be the six-incher we are speaking about - directly under her neck. And the blood was "then" running from the wound of her neck, a wording implicating that this bleeding later seized.
The Times concur with the Ilustrated Police News about where the pool was: There was a pool of blood where the neck of deceased was lying in Buck's-row.
So the pool was underneath Nicholsī neck, and nowhere else.
Further: There was blood soaked into Nicholsī ulster. Thain says that it was bloodied as far as down to the waist. This presents us with a riddle: from where did the blood in the ulster come? Did it come from the neck wounds or from the abdominal cuts? It seems that it came from the neck wound; this is proposed by Thain in the Times: He helped to put the body on the ambulance, and the back appeared to be covered with blood, which, he thought, had run from the neck as far as the waist.
This may have been what happened, of course. But it carries with it a small aber: If the blood was soaked into the ulster, then where did the blood come in contact with that garment?
If it had been via the pool under her neck, then why was not all of the blood soaked into the ulster? Why was there a six inch pool if the ulster soaked the blood up?
This is unanswerable. There was massive damage to the neck, and the wound may well have been in contact with the ulster in some area, allowing it to soak up a lot of the blood. Then the blood in the pool could have come from another vessel, not being in contact with the ulster, instead allowing the blood to flow into a the pool.
There is also the possibility that the blood in the ulster came from the abdominal wounds. Maybe these were inflicted first, as per Llewellyn. He may well have concluded that the blood amounts under her neck ruled that the neck damage must have been inflicted at as a late stage in the process, so as to prevent that much blood escaped that way.
These things we will not find a conclusive answer to. But we can see that there are potential explanations for the smallish pool of blood under her neck! There is no need at all to predispose that the pool must have received amounts of blood large enough to produce another pool down in the gutter.
Letīs also take a look at another detail: Llewellyn estimated that there was a wine glass and a half of blood in the pool. The pool was six inches in diameter.
If we pour out a six inch pool of water onto a completely flat and level surface, the amounts of water will arguably not be enough to fill a wineglass and a half. So maybe we should conclude that there was some sort of concave surface under Nichols neck, holding this amount with a surface of only six inches in diameter.
So this is the probable solution to your question - the ground was not perfectly even where she lay. Liquid will flow down, and on a perfectly flat surface, the blood would have floated down towards the gutter, forming no pool at all. The fact that there WAS a pool also tells us that there were the topographic conditions that allowed for it. And those conditions allowed for a six inch pool forming before the blood ran over the brim.
The best,
Fisherman
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