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Testing pumpkin-carving knives on cadaver arms

The knifing of pumpkins, an innocent-seeming yet carefully planned act of mutilation, sometimes results (accidentally or otherwise) in sprays, bits and smatterings of human, as well as vegetable, gore. In such cases, blood –human blood – flows, drips and coagulates.

A hands-on experiment, or rather, an experiment on hands, in 2004, tried to determine the level of medical danger an amateur can and should expect when using a pumpkin-carving tool.

Alexander M Marcus, Jason K Green and Frederick W Werner [pictured here] at the State University of New York Upstate Medical University in Syracuse published a study, called The Safety of Pumpkin-Carving Tools, in the journal Preventive Medicine.

“Pumpkin-carving accidents”, they inform their peers who read the report, “may leave people with compromised hand function”….

So begins this week’s Improbable Research column in The Guardian.

BONUS: Detail from the study:

BONUS: Martha Stewart carves a pumpkin:

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