Hullo all,
I read a jolly interesting article on here about the time generally accepted (5.30) for annie's death being bunkum. And we should discredit the eye-witnesses and listen to what Dr Philips had to say.
I, in my ignorance, decided it would be a simple matter to use Dr Phillips statement in which he said all was cold apart from a little heat under the intestines, the temperature on the day,
and the bodies cooling rate to arrive at a time from death to 6.30.
I got the temps from the casebook, using the min and max readings for both London as a whole and whitechapel, I decided to average them (just for starters, actually I think the 7th min temps are a bit off when one looks at both the london and whitechapel numbers). ANd then assume that the coldest temp would be midnight and the warmest at midday (this actually triggered another train of thought, what time of day were the readings taken? As each day has 2 nearly midnights which should be the coldest, the first or second?)
Anyhoo ignoring all that I established an approx temp for the time of death.
Then I decided to research body cooling times. Crikey is that a minefield! So I took the 1.6f an hour that I see a lot, and increase it a bit for open abdomen and blood loss.
But then I had another problem, what 'feels' warm.
So at the moment I have a bath full of water at 100f with a thermometer in it, I, and a chum, arte popping our hands into it and deciding when it no longer feels warm, in order to try to inderstand what Dr Phillips felt.
I certainly never thought, whilst emabking on this Ripper journey, that it would involve baths full of water and thermometers!
Doris
I read a jolly interesting article on here about the time generally accepted (5.30) for annie's death being bunkum. And we should discredit the eye-witnesses and listen to what Dr Philips had to say.
I, in my ignorance, decided it would be a simple matter to use Dr Phillips statement in which he said all was cold apart from a little heat under the intestines, the temperature on the day,
and the bodies cooling rate to arrive at a time from death to 6.30.
I got the temps from the casebook, using the min and max readings for both London as a whole and whitechapel, I decided to average them (just for starters, actually I think the 7th min temps are a bit off when one looks at both the london and whitechapel numbers). ANd then assume that the coldest temp would be midnight and the warmest at midday (this actually triggered another train of thought, what time of day were the readings taken? As each day has 2 nearly midnights which should be the coldest, the first or second?)
Anyhoo ignoring all that I established an approx temp for the time of death.
Then I decided to research body cooling times. Crikey is that a minefield! So I took the 1.6f an hour that I see a lot, and increase it a bit for open abdomen and blood loss.
But then I had another problem, what 'feels' warm.
So at the moment I have a bath full of water at 100f with a thermometer in it, I, and a chum, arte popping our hands into it and deciding when it no longer feels warm, in order to try to inderstand what Dr Phillips felt.
I certainly never thought, whilst emabking on this Ripper journey, that it would involve baths full of water and thermometers!
Doris
Comment