Chemical Warfare
Chemical Warfare
Chemical warfare involves the aggressive use of bulk chemicals that cause death or grave injury. These chemicals are different from the lethal chemical compounds that are part of infectious bacteria or viruses. The latter constitute biological warfare.
Forensic examinations are a part of chemical warfare, especially when the nature of the attack is unclear. Examination of the scene of the incident and of the victims provide clues that are used to determine the nature of the attack.
A number of compounds cause choking or irritation of lung tissue. Examples include chlorine, phosgene (carbonyl chloride), diphosgene, chloropicrin, ethyldichloroarsine, and perflurorisobutylene.
Chlorine gas is suffocating and quickly burns tissues in the nose, mouth, and lungs. The burned tissue can die and slough off, causing lasting damage. Chlorine gas dissipates in the air very quickly. If exposure is not too long, than damage can be minor. In contrast, the compound called disphosgene is a liquid at room temperature, and so persists much longer.
Blister agents cause the formation of large and painful blisters on the skin. Eye and lung tissue can also be damaged. A well-known example of a
blistering agent dating from World War I is mustard gas . The damage to cells of the skin cause blistering up to 24 hours after exposure to mustard gas. These blisters take a long time to heal and can send the body into a lethal shock reaction.
Other examples of blistering agents include nitrogen mustard, lewisite, and phenyldichloroarsine. The latter compound is a liquid, which can be sprayed onto an enemy or released from a balloon, helicopter, or airplane.
Blood agents interfere with the body's ability to transport oxygen in the bloodstream. This is done by either blocking the use of oxygen by cells in the body or by blocking the ability of the blood to take up the oxygen. Examples include hydrogen cyanide (also called prussic acid), cyanogen chloride, arsine, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen sulfide.
Hydrogen cyanide is initially a liquid at room temperature, but it quickly evaporates. This compound is noteworthy in recent world history, as it was used by Iraq in 1988 on an attack on the Kurdish town of Halabja during the Iran-Iraq war. Because of its past use by Iraq, hydrogen cyanide was one of the major concerns of United Nations inspectors who inspected various facilities in Iraq during the winter of 2003.
Compounds such as arsine and carbon monoxide destroy the ability of the hemoglobin component of the blood to bind oxygen. Arsine does this by destroying the red blood cells. Carbon monoxide binds to hemoglobin, blocking the binding of oxygen.
Nerve agents interfere with the body's transmission of nerve impulses. This is done by disrupting the activity of a chemical called acetyl cholinesterase, which functions to bridge the gap between adjacent nerve cells, permitting an electrical nerve signal to pass from one nerve cell to the next.
Nerve agents were first developed in 1936, following the development of organophosphate types of pesticides. The first nerve agent that was made is called tabun . It is a member of what is known as the G series of nerve agents. Other G series members are sarin and soman. Sarin is particularly lethal; a small amount absorbed through the skin can kill
someone within two minutes. When inhaled, death occurs within 15 minutes. Sarin is infamous as the gas released into the Tokyo subway system by the fringe group Aum Shinrikyo in 1995.
Another series of nerve agents are called the V series. Members of this series—which are commonly abbreviated according to their chemical composition—are more potent than the agents of the G series. As well, they persist longer in the environment. They can, for example, be applied to surfaces like roads as a slime.
Examples of V series agents include VX, VE, VG, and VM. VX is extremely potent; a drop of the liquid absorbed through the skin is lethal within a few hours if treatment is not provided.
Herbicides are chemicals that kill vegetation. Such chemicals are often used in everyday life to keep lawns free of weeds (although more environmentally-friendly alternatives are becoming popular). When used in war, herbicides are weapons of mass destruction to foliage. Destruction of plants and the resulting loss of leaf cover remove much of the concealment for an enemy in a forested area. These philosophies lead to the massive use of Agent Orange by the United States in the Vietnam War in the 1970s. Since that war, the damaging effects of herbicides like Agent Orange and paraquat on the human nervous and immune systems have become evident.
Incendiaries are chemicals that cause fires. In warfare, they are also used to remove vegetation. An infamous incendiary is napalm. Napalm is a mixture of naphthenic acid, coconut fatty acids, and palm oil. In addition to its highly flammable property, napalm absorbs into exposed skin, where it can cause severe burns if ignited.
see also Chemical and biological detection technologies; Water contamination.
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Nicolas Poussin: Friendship and the Love of Painting.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...addition to the vast literature on Nicolas Poussin was nothing less than a total...investigate the broader thematics of Poussin's landscape paintings within...fully realized "portrait" of Nicolas Poussin in which the true character of...
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Poussin peintre. (retrospective of Nicolas Poussin, 17th-century French painter)(Grand Palais, Paris, France)
Magazine article from: Art in America; 5/1/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...the 17th-century French painter Nicolas Poussin. One hundred and ten paintings...incomparable opportunity to assess Poussin's career firsthand.(1) Most...April 9.(2) The last major Poussin exhibition took place in 1960...
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Poussin and the Poetics of Painting: Pictorial Narrative and the Legacy of Tasso.(Nicolas Poussin: Die Pest von Asdod)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; Jonathan W. Unglaub. Poussin and the Poetics of Painting: Pictorial...521-83367-1. Elisabeth Hipp. Nicolas Poussin: Die Pest von Asdod. Studien zur...that gave them birth. So far as Poussin is concerned, Panofsky's noble...
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The ascent of Mount Poussin. (Nicolas Poussin, Louvre, Paris, France)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 1/21/1995; 700+ words
; ...visitors who saw the stupendous Poussin show in Paris before it closed...generation. Nobody ever claimed that Nicolas Poussin, who was born in Normandy in 1594...tapped his forehead and said, "Poussin paints from here." Crass as it...
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Dickens, Opie, and Poussin's Deluge.(Charles Dickens, John Opie, Nicolas Poussin)(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: The Explicator; 9/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Opie's analysis of a painting by Nicolas Poussin also shaped the virtuoso opening...throw the coloristic subtlety of Poussin's Deluge into relief, Opie begins...seen the picture of the Deluge by Poussin. In this work there appears neither...
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Nicolas Poussin: Friendship and the Love of Painting.(Review)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/2000; 499 words
; ...Elizabeth and Charles Dempsey, eds. Nicolas Poussin: Friendship and the Love of Painting...friendships of painter Nicholas Poussin (1594-1665) and investigate...in order that "what we know of Poussin's social and intellectual life...
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Roosting Poussin. (purchase of Nicolas Poussin painting by National Gallery of London)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 6/11/1988; 700+ words
; ...seventeenth-century French artist, Nicolas Poussin, which has been in Britain since...opportunity to raise the money for the Poussin arose because the government...squeezed British museums. The Poussin is a fine example of a late figurative...
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Essence of the sublime: once considered the lowliest of genres, landscape, in the hands of Nicolas Poussin, achieved emotion, narrative power and, above all, multiplicity of meanings.(EXHIBITIONS)
Magazine article from: Apollo; 3/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...portraiture and even animal painting. Poussin's two principal biographers, Andre...Pietro Bellori, paid little attention to Poussin's achievements in this area beyond commenting...hierarchical bias, the valuations of Poussin's landscape paintings, with rare exceptions...
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With the eyes of fashion. (landscape painting exhibit at the National Gallery of Scotland featuring the work of Paul Cezanne, Nicolas Poussin)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 8/18/1990; 700+ words
; ...According to its new exhibition, Cezanne and Poussin", Cezanne's dearest wish was to follow...he had expressed a desire to "re-do Poussin over again according to nature". By...were regularly describing Cezanne as the Poussin of impressionism. And the link has stuck...
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A dance to the music of time Mick Jagger, Nicolas Poussin and Anthony Powell have all expressed concerns about the way it mocks us, miserable wasters that we are. Furthermore, it's leap day - there's not a moment to lose! Let D J Taylor explain that ticking sound in your head
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 2/29/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...however subtly disguised, is a representation of Time. In Poussin's A Dance to the Music of Time, as the four promenading...borrow the title of one of the volumes. In Anthony Powell's Poussin-inspired 12-volume A Dance to the Music of Time, alternatively...
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Nicolas Poussin
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Nicolas Poussin Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665), one of the greatest French painters, rationally synthesized the diverse tendencies of French and Italian art. His work is a salient example of lucid control by the mind over the senses. The art...
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Poussin, Nicolas (1594–1665)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
POUSSIN, NICOLAS (1594 – 1665) POUSSIN, NICOLAS (1594 – 1665), French painter. Poussin is one of the artists most beloved by art historians because his slow but steadily developing talent, combined with his passion for...
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Poussin, Nicolas
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art
Poussin, Nicolas ( b Les Andelys, Normandy, June 1594...a church commission. Soon afterwards Poussin moved to Paris, where he probably spent...lived in Paris. Encouraged by Marino, Poussin set out for Rome (he had already made...
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Gaspard Poussin
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Gaspard Poussin , 1615-75, French landscape painter, b. Rome. The son of a Frenchman named Dughet, he adopted the name of his brother-in-law, Nicolas Poussin , in whose studio he worked and whose influence is visible in his interpretations...
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Claude Lorrain
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...19th century. Claude Lorrain and Nicolas Poussin were the most distinguished exponents...middle of the 17th century. Whereas Poussin was interested in rendering the...two to any pronounced degree. If Poussin's art is the last phase of rational...
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