Post by Z451 on Jun 16, 2016 18:18:51 GMT
2-4-5 Trioxin Zombies
Trioxin is a yellowish, whitish, or greenish vapor (caused by sulfurism) which makes your skin feel as though it it is burning.
It has been known to be typically stored under pressure in large steel drums.
It was originally developed by the Darrow Chemical Company for the United States military as an herbicide to destroy marijuana plants; however, the Army was quite surprised when the gas also restored function to the nervous systems of cadavers, dismembered body parts, and even dead animals and insects.
Moreover, trioxin appears to be toxic, and a single exposure to a concentrated amount can both kill a person and revive them again.
Zombies created by exposure to trioxin retain all of their former intelligence and abilities, including the abilities to speak, run, and reason.
Human behaviors and emotions fade as the brain shuts down leaving only the base instincts to feed.
Like normal cadavers, they suffer the effects of rigor mortis.
They also crave human brains; one zombie explains that brains are required to stave off the pain of decomposition.
Unlike other zombies, the only known ways to destroy zombies created by trioxin are by incineration or electrocution.
Attempts to destroy the brain or even completely dismember a trioxin zombie have invariably failed.
Though a volatile gas, 2-4-5 Trioxin is fairly stable, and can withstand temperatures in the thousands of degrees.
Attempts to cremate trioxin-spawned zombies typically release trioxin gas into the air, where it may contaminate rainclouds.
The resulting rainfall is irritating to the skin which often leads victims to assume that it is acid rain when it fact the diluted Trioxin is causing their nerve ends to fire randomly.
This "Trioxin shower" is no longer concentrated enough to kill a human but if the contaminated rainwater falls on a location housing corpses, such as a cemetery, it can potentially reanimate every corpse interred there.
According to the Return of the Living Dead series, trioxin was the cause of an incident on which the movie Night of the Living Dead was based.
The incident states that at some point in the 60's, 2-4-5 Trioxin was spilled and seeped into a VA morgue.
Since the zombies created by Trioxin could not be killed with a shot to the head, unlike the zombies in the film, they were stored in sealed drums for two decades.
In Return of the Living Dead III, it is revealed that the U.S. military is deliberately experimenting with trioxin in an effort to create zombie supersoldiers.
This is further explored in Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis, where most of the plot takes place in a lab for that very purpose.
In Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis and Return of the Living Dead 5: Rave from the Grave, the chemical is referred to simply as Trioxin 5.
This is perhaps purposeful, as in the aforementioned films the reanimated act rather differently than in the first 3 parts, and are easily killed through the traditional head-shot (a la George A. Romero zombies) possibly indicating that a new version of Trioxin was developed specifically in order to be able to destroy the zombies it creates in the event they get out of control.
Any one who comes into contact with an infected human must and should contact their center for disease control as soon as possible.
You may experience fever-like symptoms accompanied by hypoxia (swelling of the larynx, sweating, clammy skin) and/or dizziness.
Kaiser Permanente has known about this for years.
However, They've been ignored in the general community.
Links
Zombie Wiki
Wikipedia
Copyright Owner
MGM Studios
Record:
W:
L:
It has been known to be typically stored under pressure in large steel drums.
It was originally developed by the Darrow Chemical Company for the United States military as an herbicide to destroy marijuana plants; however, the Army was quite surprised when the gas also restored function to the nervous systems of cadavers, dismembered body parts, and even dead animals and insects.
Moreover, trioxin appears to be toxic, and a single exposure to a concentrated amount can both kill a person and revive them again.
Zombies created by exposure to trioxin retain all of their former intelligence and abilities, including the abilities to speak, run, and reason.
Human behaviors and emotions fade as the brain shuts down leaving only the base instincts to feed.
Like normal cadavers, they suffer the effects of rigor mortis.
They also crave human brains; one zombie explains that brains are required to stave off the pain of decomposition.
Unlike other zombies, the only known ways to destroy zombies created by trioxin are by incineration or electrocution.
Attempts to destroy the brain or even completely dismember a trioxin zombie have invariably failed.
Though a volatile gas, 2-4-5 Trioxin is fairly stable, and can withstand temperatures in the thousands of degrees.
Attempts to cremate trioxin-spawned zombies typically release trioxin gas into the air, where it may contaminate rainclouds.
The resulting rainfall is irritating to the skin which often leads victims to assume that it is acid rain when it fact the diluted Trioxin is causing their nerve ends to fire randomly.
This "Trioxin shower" is no longer concentrated enough to kill a human but if the contaminated rainwater falls on a location housing corpses, such as a cemetery, it can potentially reanimate every corpse interred there.
According to the Return of the Living Dead series, trioxin was the cause of an incident on which the movie Night of the Living Dead was based.
The incident states that at some point in the 60's, 2-4-5 Trioxin was spilled and seeped into a VA morgue.
Since the zombies created by Trioxin could not be killed with a shot to the head, unlike the zombies in the film, they were stored in sealed drums for two decades.
In Return of the Living Dead III, it is revealed that the U.S. military is deliberately experimenting with trioxin in an effort to create zombie supersoldiers.
This is further explored in Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis, where most of the plot takes place in a lab for that very purpose.
In Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis and Return of the Living Dead 5: Rave from the Grave, the chemical is referred to simply as Trioxin 5.
This is perhaps purposeful, as in the aforementioned films the reanimated act rather differently than in the first 3 parts, and are easily killed through the traditional head-shot (a la George A. Romero zombies) possibly indicating that a new version of Trioxin was developed specifically in order to be able to destroy the zombies it creates in the event they get out of control.
Any one who comes into contact with an infected human must and should contact their center for disease control as soon as possible.
You may experience fever-like symptoms accompanied by hypoxia (swelling of the larynx, sweating, clammy skin) and/or dizziness.
Kaiser Permanente has known about this for years.
However, They've been ignored in the general community.
Links
Zombie Wiki
Wikipedia
Copyright Owner
MGM Studios
Record:
W:
L: