Inventors Killed by Her findings


Inventors Killed by Her findings - Living an inventor is not easy because they have to find a good idea to solve the problem, in a way that has never been carried out by others. Some are successful, but there is also a fruitful tragedy.

Reporting from the Mother Nature Network, Wednesday (29/08/2012), previously mentioned three of the seven inventor whose life ended due to his findings. This is the fourth sequel.

1. Thomas Jr. Midgey.
This man is a chemist known as the discovery of a "no-knock" or gasoline with lead and freon gas. He had suffered from lead poisoning, had poured gasoline on hand mixed lead and breathe air from the flask containing gasoline it for 60 seconds to prove safety findings.

However, Midgley's death not caused by lead poisoning. He was killed by the other findings supporting the series of ropes to support himself while he was in bed affected by polio. He tangled rigging was on 2 November 1944 and suffocate to death.

2. Marie Curie
This woman was a physicist and chemist famous for his work on the theory of radioactivity. He also discovered the elements polonium and radium, once won two Nobel Prize for physics and chemistry.

Unfortunately, he unwittingly discovered radioactive fatal effects on human health. This woman died on the 4th of July! 934 due to aplastic anemia caused by exposure to radioactive.

3. Perillos of Athens
The inventor of this one may be the most appropriate killed by their own inventions when compared to other inventors on this list. Perillos is bronze craftsmen who lived in the ancient Rome and designed the Brazen Bull.

Brazen Bull was a bull-shaped device that is empty at its center and is used to execute criminals. Criminals locked up in the tool is then roasted to death by a fire lit underneath.

Perillos even designed the tool to make the villain screams burning in them to get out and be heard like the sound bull.

He demonstrated the device at a local tyrant named Phalaris. Later, he was put in a homemade device while under fire ignited.

4. Valerian Abakovsky
Abakovsky is a 26-year-old Russian inventor who died in the trial findings, Aerowagon high-speed rail engine. Abakovsky died with five others.

Aerowagon Abakovsky findings have an airplane engine and propeller. This tool is designed to transport Soviet officials to and from Moscow. Aerowagon worked well at the start of the trial, but off the track on the way back to the capital.

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