Tragedy Strikes: Tragic last moments of man recorded as he was dissolved in acid at Yellowstone park leaving behind just…
All that was left were his wallet and flip-flops
Being skinned alive and drowning sound like some of the worst ways to die.
However, boiling alive and then dissolving in acid could be one of the most terrifying.
Colin Scott and his sister Sable were exploring the Porkchop Geyser in Yellowstone National Park, US, when a sad catastrophe occurred.
The couple disregarded caution signs and hiked into a banned part of the park for an unauthorized swim.
Sable recorded her 23-year-old brother stepping from the Norris Geyser Basin boardwalk. However, as he sought for the ideal location, Colin stumbled and fell into the scalding water.
There, his body was boiled alive until the acidic waters dissolved it, leaving just his shoes and wallet.
Sable’s phone captured the moment he collapsed and her desperate attempt to save him.
Police have retained the video tape on file, but it has never been disclosed.
Colin Scott was looking for a place to go for a swim when he slipped and fell into a searing hot spring.
After the accident, Sable dashed to a neighboring museum for assistance, but by the time she returned with three park officers it was too late.
They could see parts of Colin’s head, body, and hands floating in the hot spring, which is claimed to have reached 100 degrees Celsius, or boiling point.
A 2016 police investigation states: “Due to the report of the individual not previously visible, a lack of movement, suspected extreme temperatures, and indications of several thermal burns, the subject was determined to be deceased.”
Due to an impending storm, rangers were unable to remove Colin’s body immediately.
When they returned the next day, he had vanished.
It is thought that his body disintegrated overnight, leaving only his wallet and flip flops.
His body dissolved in the corrosive water, leaving just his wallet and flip-flops. (Patrick Gorski/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
The findings are as follows: “The consensus among the rescue/recovery team … was that the extreme heat of the hot spring, coupled with its acidic nature, dissolved the remains.”
A Japanese guy died in excruciating pain as a result of radiation exposure.
Hisashi Ouchi was a technician at the Tokaimura Nuclear Power Plant, located about 90 miles northwest of Tokyo.
Disaster happened in 1999 when a mistake caused the uranium he was putting into a metal vat to exceed the ‘critical point,’ releasing lethal neutron radiation and gamma rays into the air.
Ouchi absorbed 17 Sieverts (sv) of radiation, the largest amount ever absorbed by a single living human, and rapidly fell critically ill.
Ouchi died of multiple organ failure after 83 days of torment, during which he ‘cried blood’ as his’skin melted.
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