John Drew 47
Junior Member
The "blood splatter" inside the container was observed (after turning on the lights) on the top of the cream layer that floated on the yogurt. (That cream layer is a feature of this type of yogurt.) The water-based yogurt below the cream was removed and devoured.. The sample that remains is the "blood" splattered on one spot on the inside, vertical wall of the container (above the top surface of the yogurt), plus the (uneaten) area of splatter on top of the cream.. This remaining sample always had low water content because it was predominantly dairy fat.why would the blood dry out? After all, you claim it was sprayed upon the yogurt. It would remain hydrated due to the water in the yogurt.
That is generally true, when considering an isolated, dried blood sample.. However this case is different, because the yogurt (before the cream separated, by floating to the top) had been cultured (colonized) with five types of living "yogurt culture" organisms.. Much later, the very-thin layer of "blood splatter" was itself colonized and biologically acted upon, by these five separate, living yogurt cultures. (These living cultures are found together, exclusively in this one brand of yogurt.)Additionally, blood does not turn brown when it dries. It turns carmine.
Of course doesn't prove that any blood is present, and that testing is still first on the to-do list.
Not being in the habit of looking inside freshly-opened yogurt containers for foreign objects, I started eating the yogurt without "down-lighting", in a room only lit only by the bright horizontal glare of the computer monitor -- where the surface of the yogurt was not plainly visible because of the "reduced iris size", caused by facing the computer's glare.Since you were eating this yogurt from the container, how did you not see the blood spatter when first opening the container?
The container's opening was, and still is 4.25 inches in diameter -- on a one-quart, 32-ounce yogurt container.How large was the opening of the container? Since you claim to have not disturbed at least part of the surface of the yogurt, it would have had to be fairly large. That would tend to eliminate the possibility of the blood being obscured by the container when you opened it such as the small (4 oz or so) containers that have a very small opening.
No, the drama award is entirely yours.. Let's hope the hookah hasn't seized control of your keyboard.It is obvious you are either responding to a question in school or undertaking a bit of dramatic writing and ... Yakuza go into the yogurt factory and start using Samurai swords to hack people apart while the machine was running
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