Description
Through a fatal combination of copper pipes and cheap limes, the world's greatest navy accidentally destroyed the very cure that secured their empire. The British Navy famously conquered the devastating plague of scurvy in the eighteenth century by mandating daily rations of citrus juice, seemingly solving maritime medicine's greatest mystery. The problem was thought to be entirely eradicated, ensuring global naval dominance.Yet, decades later, scurvy inexplicably returned to devastate polar expeditions and naval fleets, baffling the greatest scientific minds of the era. The hidden culprit was a fatal chain of bureaucratic and chemical errors. In an attempt to cut costs and improve storage, the Admiralty switched from high-vitamin Mediterranean lemons to West Indian limes, and began pumping the juice through massive copper pipes. The resulting chemical oxidation completely eradicated the fragile Vitamin C, transforming the life-saving tonic into a useless, highly acidic placebo.This rigorous medical history investigates how an empire accidentally un-cured its deadliest disease. It explores the dangerous arrogance of institutional medicine, the complex biochemistry of vitamin degradation, and the devastating human cost of ignoring fundamental nutritional science.Uncover the deadly blind spots of historical maritime medicine. Read this fascinating investigation to understand how logistical arrogance and bureaucratic cost-cutting can effortlessly destroy decades of vital scientific progress.



