Wednesday, October 16, 2013

We're on TV this Thursday!

This Thursday at 9pm, Wakefield Museum’s collections will feature on Pain, Pus and Poison: The Search for Modern Medicines a new series on BBC4 hosted by Dr Michael Mosley. The series explores some of the unlikely and surprising sources of many modern drugs. 

This week's episode looks at how some poisons have become cures  for illness and features the work of Wakefield’s pioneering Victorian eco-warrior Charles Waterton. During travels in Guyana in South America in 1812 Waterton learned how the Amerindian tribes made curare, a poison with which they tipped blow pipe darts. He brought back powerful samples and applied them to a donkey, which he then kept alive by using a pair of bellows to keep it breathing. The donkey survived and lived for decades, and Waterton had led new research into modern anaesthetics.



Dr Michael Mosley wearing gloves and holding an object in front of an impressive bookcase at Walton Hall
Filming at Walton Hall

Dr Michael Mosley looking at objects on a table in front of a book case at Walton Hall
Don't get too close to those darts Dr Mosley!

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