You would use it once, and then a bit of crab claw would get stuck in there. Yes. It would get salmonella. And the next time you had the crab claw, you would be dead. Oh, its one of these. Its one of these. Yes yes. What do you mean, its one of these . Ive never seen this before in my life. Kay i think its for making holes in roast lamb, for slotting in a garlic clove. Extracting gunk out of your ear. laughing still no answers . No definite answer but a lot of food for thought. Definitely. Bruce and a few weeks later, all became clear. There were lots of letters written in saying, we know what it is. And one of the best was from, i think he was the curator of the collection of the Royal College of surgeons who said, of course, this is what it is. It was actually a tracheotomy instrument and he came with the missing bits. Man and this was used as what is called a pilot, in order to penetrate an incision which is made in the neck when patients were suffocating to death. And this would re
A new exhibition is to examine how British artist JMW Turner unknowingly captured the permanent impact people were having on the environment in his paintings. A World of Care will see the landscape painter's works presented alongside modern examples of environmental issues to show how he captured changes to his world that would alter the climate forever, BBC reported.
Turner captured the planet s turning point yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The 12 most iconic paintings in The National Gallery, by gallery curator Dr Francesca Whitlum-Cooper countrylife.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from countrylife.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.