I also have some timing questions with this context: the wound is inflicted by a sword during combat:
1. How long until the person is incapacitated?
2. Would the adrenaline rush from being in battle give that person more time on her feet?
3. How long until bleed out/ the toxins in the body get too high and the person dies?
Thanks for everything.
Black bile is one of the four "humours" and is associated with melancholy, so something black and liquid had to have come out of a body when it was pierced at some time for the idea to have been so prevalent at one time.
I think I'd worry that the intestines had been perforated if black came out. That kind of wound is usually fatal because the contents of the intestines will infect the rest of the abdominal cavity fairly quickly (which is why a burst appendix is so dangerous).
Could the blood be magically black, from a magical weapon or from a curse, perhaps?
It took me 12 hours and the help of my dog to recover the animal after the shot--it had run more than 200 yards and hidden in a dense thicket prior to expiring. Based on the behavior of this deer at the shot and after, and my knowledge of the similarities and differences in the way deer and people react to wounds, here's what I'd say to your questions:
1. How long until the person is incapacitated?
The blood trail of the deer I shot showed that she started getting woozy after about 10 minutes and lay down. Something scared her from her resting place, and she ran 125 yards before collapsing. She collapsed perhaps 15 minutes after the shot, by my estimation.
A human wouldn't fare so well if stabbed or shot through the liver. Our blood doesn't clot as well, and we don't have the raw animal determination of, well, an animal. I'd guess a couple of minutes of strenuous activity would be the limit. Maybe 10 to 15 minutes of consciousness if laying still. More, if it's a small stab or handgun wound. Less, if it's a major stab or rifle wound.
2. Would the adrenaline rush from being in battle give that person more time on her feet?
My guess would be the adrenaline rush would help reach that few minutes noted above. Without it, most people would probably collapse from shock at impact.
3. How long until bleed out/ the toxins in the body get too high and the person dies?
Probably 10 to 15 minutes to unconsciousness. 15 minutes to a couple of hours to death.
All these guesses are educated in the sense that I've seen this happen to a large mammal, but approximate in the sense that the mammal in question was not human.
In the movie The Jackal (ironically!) Bruce Willis shoots a woman through a sofa. He tells her that he got her in the liver and that she has about fifteen minutes left to live. Paramedics came while she was alive but could not save her.
Internal bleedings can be used for a very (melo)dramatic piece of the story
[This message has been edited by MartinV (edited December 08, 2008).]
I couldn't remember if it was the liver or kidneys. I probably should have said that in the original post. That's also the other movie I was thinking of but couldn't remember the name. He shot her so she'd have enough time to tell the person she was working for that he was the one to shoot her but the wound was irretrievably fatal.
Thanks for the time estimate J. Seems like the 5 or fewer minutes I have her on her feet would be plausable then.
This is why I LOVE this group.
You're hunting footage of the deer taking off with arrows in them was also pretty eye opening. If I remember right out of 20-30 clips, only one deer fell immediately.