Article ID: CBB001252461

Experimental Physiology, Everest and Oxygen: From the Ghastly Kitchens to the Gasping Lung (2013)

unapi

Often the truth value of a scientific claim is dependent on our faith that laboratory experiments can model nature. When the nature that you are modelling is something as large as the tallest terrestrial mountain on earth, and as mysterious (at least until 1953) as the reaction of the human body to the highest point on the earth's surface, mapping between laboratory and `real world' is a tricky process. The so-called `death zone' of Mount Everest is a liminal space; a change in weather could make the difference between a survivable mountaintop and a site where the human respiratory system cannot maintain basic biological functions. Predicting what would happen to the first human beings to climb that high was therefore literally a matter of life or death -- here inaccurate models could kill. Consequently, high-altitude respiratory physiology has prioritized not the laboratory, but the field. A holistic, environmentally situated sort of science used a range of (often non-scientific) expertise to prove the laboratory wrong time after time. In so doing, Everest was constructed paradoxically both as a unique field site which needed to be studied in vivo, and as a `natural laboratory' which could produce generalizable knowledge about the human (male) body.

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Description On the laboratory and field modeling of respiration physiology in preparation for human ascent to Mount Everest.


Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Luzzini, Francesco
Clements, Philip William
Maurizio Rossi
Dabrowski, Patrice M.
Master, Sharad
Chetan Singh
Journals
Natura Alpina, Rivista della Società di Scienze Naturali del Trentino
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
Social Studies of Science
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Environment and History
Publishers
Museo delle Scienze, Trento
University of West Virginia Press
University of Washington Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
University of Nebraska Press
Insegna del Giglio
Concepts
Mountains
Environmental history
Geology
Field work
Mountaineering
Mines and mining
People
Mohs, Friedrich
Tyndall, John
Scrope, George Poullett
Saussure, Ferdinand de
MacCulloch, John
Lyell, Charles
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
18th century
Early modern
Renaissance
Medieval
Places
Alps (Europe)
Italy
Himalayan Mountains (Nepal)
United States
Austro-hungary
Piedmont
Institutions
East India Company (English)
United States. National Park Service
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