It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
...something I saw at the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia. The wax model shown in the photograph below is of a woman who had a "monstrous growth" on her forehead. It's hard not to be creeped out by such things today. Imagine how people would have reacted in a society that still believed in witches, demons, and spells!
Originally posted by uberarcanist
I'm sorry, that horn does not look real at all. It looks glued on.
Its puffy because Gorilla Glue puffs up when it dries.
Originally posted by the_sentinal
could be some kind of nephilim hybred or something like that...........very strange indeed. I dont think it's glued on because of the way the skin seems to puff up around the base of the horn.
Originally posted by marg6043
The horn looks like is glue to the poor old lady forehead. Interesting to point out that we are seen an increased amound of weird news and photos coming from china lately.
Conspiracy? maybe.
Although, it is unknown what the protrusion is on Mrs Zhang’s head, it resembles a cutaneous horn.
This is a funnel-shaped growth and although most are only a few millimetres in length, some can extend a number of inches from the skin.
Cutaneous horns are made up of compacted keratin, which is the same protein we have in our hair and nails, and forms horns, wool and feathers in animals.
They usually develop in fair-skinned elderly adults who have a history of significant sun exposure but it is extremely unusual to see it form protrusions of this size.
The growths are most common in elderly people, aged between 60 and the mid-70s. They can sometimes be cancerous but more than half of cases are benign.
Common underlying causes of cutaneous horns are common warts, skin cancer and actinic keratoses, patches of scaly skin that develop on skin exposed to the sun, such as your face, scalp or forearms.
Cutaneous horns can be removed surgically but this does not treat the underlying cause.