Spontaneous human combustion

Spontaneous human combustion

Spontaneous human combustion (SHC) refers to the belief that the human body sometimes burns without an external source of ignition. There is much speculation and controversy regarding SHC, for it is an unproven natural phenomenon.

Possible explanations

Many theories and hypotheses have attempted to explain how SHC might occur, but those which rely on current scientific understanding say that instances mistaken for "spontaneous" combustion actually required a source of ignition. One such hypothesis is the "wick effect", in which the clothing of the victim soaks up melted human fat and acts like the wick of a candle. Another possibility is that the clothing is caused to burn by a discharge of static electricity. The likelihood that truly spontaneous human combustion actually takes place is remote, due to significant water content and the lack of readily flammable compounds and oxygen in the human body. [http://skepdic.com/shc.html Skeptic's Dictionary on spontaneous human combustion, Retrieved Oct 20, 2007 "The physical possibilities of spontaneous human combustion are remote."]

As an anomalous phenomenon

A field of SHC theory believe that the cause of SHC is supernatural, however this is not accepted by the scientific community.

John E Heymer and "The Entrancing Flame"

Described by Joe Nickell as an "English coal-miner-turned-constable," [ [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2843/is_n2_v22/ai_20562395 Fiery tales that spontaneously destruct - reports on spontaneous human combustion - includes an investigative chronology based on a published photograph | Skeptical Inquirer | Find Articles at BNET.com ] ] John E Heymer wrote a 1996 book entitled "The Entrancing Flame".

The title is derived from one deductive conclusion that he has reached from examining many cases, namely that SHC victims are lonely people who fall into a trance immediately before their incineration.

Heymer suggests that a psychosomatic process in such emotionally-distressed people can trigger off a chain reaction by freeing hydrogen and oxygen within the body and setting off a chain reaction of mitochondrial explosions.

However, Heymer's theories have no basis in scientific theory. Ian Simmons, in a review of "The Entrancing Flame", criticized Heymer thus: "He seems to be under the illusion that hydrogen and oxygen exist as gases in the mitochondrial cell ["sic"] and are thus vulnerable to ignition, which is, in fact, not the case." [Simmons, Ian (1996). "All Fired up With Spontaneity". In "Fortean Times", p 57, issue number 90 (September 1996).]

Alleged deaths and survivals

Deaths

* Robert Francis Bailey
* Dr John Irving Bentley
* George I. Mott
* Mary Hardy Reeser (also known as The Cinder Lady)
* Jeannie Saffin
* Henry Thomas

urvivals

A number of people have reported serious burns that injured their bodies with no apparent cause. If this is not the alleged phenomenon known as SHC, it would appear to be a very closely-related occurrence. This list is not intended to be taken as comprehensive.

* Jack Angel

Survivors of static flash fires/events

Two examples of people surviving potentially-catastrophic static flash events are given in John E Heymer's book "The Entrancing Flame". Each case is backed up by eyewitnesses

The accounts are in the form of written and signed statements from named individuals, shorn of some details to protect the privacy of correspondents. Summaries follow.

* [Heymer, John E (1996): "The Entrancing Flame", pp202-3, London, Little, Brown, ISBN 0-316-87694-1] In September 1985, a young woman named Debbie Clark was walking home when she noticed an occasional flash of blue light::cquote|It was me. I was lighting up the driveway every couple of steps.
As we got into the garden I thought it was funny at that point. I was walking around in circles saying: 'look at this, mum, look!' She started screaming and my brother came to the door and started screaming and shouting 'Have you never heard of spontaneous human combustion?'
: Debbie's mother, Dianne Clark::cquote|I screamed at her to get her shoes off and it [the flashes] kept going so I hassled her through and got her into the bath. I thought that the bath is wired to earth. It was a blue light you know what they call electric blue. She thought it was fun, she was laughing.

* Heymer, op cit, pp204.] In winter 1980, Cheshire, England resident Susan Motteshead was standing in her kitchen, wearing flame-resistant pajamas, when she was suddenly engulfed in a short-lived fire that seemed to have ignited the fluff on her clothing but burned out before it could set anything properly alight.

:cquote|I was stood in the kitchen and my daughter just screamed out that my back was on fire. As I looked down it sort of whooshed all over me. It was like yellow and blue flames all over me. I was not burned at all. Not even my hair was burned.: The daughter, Joanne Motteshead, confirms this account and adds that the fire brigade arrived and tried (unsuccessfully) to set fire to Susan's pajamas.

* : The two subjects (Debbie Clark and Susan Motteshead), speaking independently and with no knowledge of each other, give similar histories.

: Clark: :cquote|I was not wearing any nylon clothing [at the time of the flashes] . I used to suffer a lot with static electricity so I tended not to wear anything nylon. I used to crackle with static when taking off my clothes and if I touched any metal thing it used to hurt me. I used to have a lot of trouble with electrical things. They would break down or blow up.

: Motteshead: :cquote|I had just washed and dried my hair [at the time of the incident] . I used to have a lot of static electricity when I was younger. I used to get shocks from touching fridges, things like that.

In fiction

In the novel "Bleak House" by Charles Dickens, the character Krook is killed by spontaneous combustion, "engendered in the corrupted humors of the vicious body itself".

In the first chapter of the novel "Jacob Faithful" (1834) by Frederick Marryat there is a vivid account of the hero's mother perishing "in that very peculiar and dreadful manner, which does sometimes, although rarely, occur, to those who indulge in an immoderate use of spirituous liquor. Cases of this kind do, indeed, present themselves but once in a century, but the occurrence of them is too well authenticated. She perished from what is termed spontaneous combustion, an inflammation of the gases generated from the spirits absorbed into the system."

Examples of spontaneous combustion occur in three works by the nineteenth-century Russian author Nikolai Gogol. In the story "St. John's Eve" from Gogol's "Village Evenings Near Dikanka" (1831-32) the guilty character Petro the orphan spontaneously combusts when confronted with a vision of a child he had killed. In the story "Vii," a huntsman in a Cossack village combusts after an encounter with a witch: "And once, when they came to the stable, instead of him there was just a heap of ashes and an empty bucket lying there: he burned up, burned up of his own self." In the novel "Dead Souls", the landowner Korobochka laments that her serf-blacksmith burned up: "Something inside him started burning somehow, he'd had too much to drink. A blue flame just came out of him, and he smoldered and smoldered all over, and turned black as charcoal, and he was such a really skillful blacksmith! [ Lee B Croft. "People in Threes Going Up In Smoke and Other Triplicities in Russian Literature and Culture" The Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, Vol. 59, No. 2 (2005), pp.l 29-49] ."

Jules Verne describes in his novel "Dick Sand, A Captain at Fifteen" (1878) that when a fictional African "King of Kazounde" tasted a punch set aflame, "An act of spontaneous combustion had just taken place. The king had taken fire like a petroleum bonbon. This fire developed little heat, but it devoured nonetheless." Verne has no doubt about SHC being the result of alcoholism : "In bodies so thoroughly alcoholized, combustion only produces a light and bluish flame, that water cannot extinguish. Even stifled outside, it would still continue to burn inwardly. When liquor has penetrated all the tissues, there exists no means of arresting the combustion."

In the video game "Twisted Metal III", the character Damien Cole is described as having "mastered the fine art of spontaneous combustion", leading others to believe he has lighter fluid coursing through his veins.

In the novel "Brimstone (book)" (2004) by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child spontaneous human combustion is discussed as a possible cause of death in some homicides.

In the novel "Fire Pattern" by Irish sci-fi writer Bob Shaw Spontaneous Human Combustion is result of alien invaders taking control of human bodies.

In the movie "Repo Man", the incineration of a police officer by the mysterious object in the trunk of a car is cited as an example of spontaneous human combustion by a government agent ("It happens sometimes. People just explode.")

In the episode "Soft Light" of the television series "The X-Files" some murder victims are thought to have died via spontaneous human combustion.

In the animated television series "South Park", the episode "Spontaneous Combustion" involves many people in the town suddenly bursting into flames. Stan Marsh's father finds out this is caused by intestinal gas.

One of the interviewers of the show Celebrity Deathmatch, Stacey Cornbread, died because of spontaneous human comubstion.

In the film "This Is Spinal Tap" several of the band's drummers died of freak accidents, including one who spontaneously combusted on stage, leaving behind only a "globule". David St. Hubbins stated "Dozens of people spontaneously combust every year; it's just not very widely reported."

In the BBC TV series "New Tricks", an episode called "Big Topped" featured an apparently impossible crime involving incineration inside a locked circus caravan; spontaneous human combustion is suggested as an explanation, although this is later rejected. At one point one of the characters replicates the QED experiment referred to above.

In marvel's fantastic four Johnny Storm has the ability to spontaneously combust at will.

Quotes

ee also

* Exploding animal
* Anomalous phenomena
* Combustion
* Spontaneous combustion
* Pyrokinesis

References

External links

* [http://www.csicop.org/si/9611/shc.html CSICOP article on spontaneous human combustion]
* [http://skepdic.com/shc.html "Spontaneous Human Combustion"] - from the "Skeptic's Dictionary"
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/158853.stm A BBC article describing the experiment]
* [http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a1_205b.html Article on causes of spontaneous human combustion including history.]
* [http://anomalyinfo.com/shc/index.htm#ga00003 Spontaneous Human Combustion an Anomalies Study.]
* [http://www.spookyfiles.com/Spontaneous-Human-Combustion-or-SHC/ Spontaneous Human Combustion or SHC from SpookyFiles.]
* [http://www.sdreader.com/php/ma_show.php?id=926 Matthew Alice's Straight from the Hip column on spontaneous human combustion]
* [http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a1_205b.html Article on causes of spontaneous human combustion including history]
* [http://awkwardtoad.blogspot.com/2006/04/pardon-me-while-i-burst-into-flames.html "Pardon Me, While I Burst Into Flames"]


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