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Journal Article

Citation

Woolf A. J. Toxicol. Clin. Toxicol. 2000; 38(4): 457-460.

Affiliation

Harvard Medical School, Boston Children's Hospital, Massachusetts Poison Control System, 02115, USA. Woolf@a1.tch.harvard.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Marcel Dekker)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10930065

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Salem witchcraft trials of 1692 have been studied by many historians looking for the complex social, political, and psychological determinants behind the community-wide hysteria that led to a travesty of justice and the deaths of 20 innocent Puritans. Recently, ergot poisoning has been put forth by some as a previously unsuspected cause of the bizarre behaviors of the young adolescent girls who accused the townsfolk of witchcraft. In this essay the circumstances behind the ergot poisoning theory for this historical event are described. When the evidence is weighed carefully both pro and con, it seems unlikely that ergotism explains much of what went on in colonial Salem.


Language: en

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