Elamarna: Ok as tedious as this is I have to comment
Yes we have ties to Chapman and Kelly, but not in my view Jackson. The pieces of tissue are very different animals.
We do not know this at all, Steve. They may have been quite similar to the Ripper flaps in many respects - and the more important matter is that there WERE flaps removed to open up the abdominal cavity in each case.
We have Llewellyn himself saying no portion of the body was missing and yet you prefer to take a comment by a paper which does not appear to be quoting Llewellyn or indeed Spratling; But the views of who knows who.
The same report goes on to claim ANY of the abdomen wounds could have killed her.
This is obviously untrue, some of the cuts are called minor and do not penetrate to the abdomenial wall let along passed it.
I don´t think any of the parts was missing. I think they were all there - but that a flap had been cut from the abdominal wall, so as to fold over and end up with the underside up. That is the part spoken of, to my mind.
Maybe any of the abdominal wounds COULD have killed Nichols, by the way - how do we know that it wasn´t so.
When looking at reports one needs to read all and then judge how accurate the whole maybe.
Which is what I have done.
While I have concerns with guess work and estimations from 19th century medic I have none with basic factual reporting. There are no reports of any cut tissues being found, and Llewellyn says nothing was missing. That seems clear.
There were lots of cut tissues, and no part was missing, so Llewellyn is on the money, by the looks of things.
To go back to this folding back you suggest, it's just not physically possible with out two horizontal cuts bisecting a vertical one.
Your previous response on another thread to this point did not even begin to explain How this was possible.
And of course Spratlings comments reported in the Evening News do not say that the abdomen wall was folded back do they?
He says "turned over". That works like the leaf of a book. The addition from the Morning Advertiser tells me that we may have a flap that was clearly enough cut to do this.
He says the "flesh" which may just mean the skin.
In which case he would probably have said "the skin" - he knew the difference. And turning the skin over would not expose the bowels - which was what happened.
What we do see from Joshua,s work is a probability that there was more than a single vertical cut.
We see a bit more than so, Steve.
Yes we have ties to Chapman and Kelly, but not in my view Jackson. The pieces of tissue are very different animals.
We do not know this at all, Steve. They may have been quite similar to the Ripper flaps in many respects - and the more important matter is that there WERE flaps removed to open up the abdominal cavity in each case.
We have Llewellyn himself saying no portion of the body was missing and yet you prefer to take a comment by a paper which does not appear to be quoting Llewellyn or indeed Spratling; But the views of who knows who.
The same report goes on to claim ANY of the abdomen wounds could have killed her.
This is obviously untrue, some of the cuts are called minor and do not penetrate to the abdomenial wall let along passed it.
I don´t think any of the parts was missing. I think they were all there - but that a flap had been cut from the abdominal wall, so as to fold over and end up with the underside up. That is the part spoken of, to my mind.
Maybe any of the abdominal wounds COULD have killed Nichols, by the way - how do we know that it wasn´t so.
When looking at reports one needs to read all and then judge how accurate the whole maybe.
Which is what I have done.
While I have concerns with guess work and estimations from 19th century medic I have none with basic factual reporting. There are no reports of any cut tissues being found, and Llewellyn says nothing was missing. That seems clear.
There were lots of cut tissues, and no part was missing, so Llewellyn is on the money, by the looks of things.
To go back to this folding back you suggest, it's just not physically possible with out two horizontal cuts bisecting a vertical one.
Your previous response on another thread to this point did not even begin to explain How this was possible.
And of course Spratlings comments reported in the Evening News do not say that the abdomen wall was folded back do they?
He says "turned over". That works like the leaf of a book. The addition from the Morning Advertiser tells me that we may have a flap that was clearly enough cut to do this.
He says the "flesh" which may just mean the skin.
In which case he would probably have said "the skin" - he knew the difference. And turning the skin over would not expose the bowels - which was what happened.
What we do see from Joshua,s work is a probability that there was more than a single vertical cut.
We see a bit more than so, Steve.
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