• ThunderQueen@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    My 4th grade science teacher genuinely taught us that “blood is blue before it leaves your body and turns red due to oxidation from contacting the air”

    • WFloyd@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      That’s wild to me cos like… We didn’t need internet to tell us this was incorrect.

      • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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        18 days ago

        It’s not like it doesn’t have some logic to it. Blood carries oxygen throughout the body and then cycles back through the lungs to get more oxygen. So when you look at your arms and see the blue veins we just thought that was obviously the deoxygenated blood returning to the heart.

        It made basic sense, so no one was running down to the library to check out a medical textbook to disprove it.

        • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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          19 days ago

          Ever see a blood draw? Blood comes out of a vein, into a non-O2 environment.

          I think we just don’t do as much critical introspection as we like to think. Its easier to imagine maybe there was a tiny amount of O2 or something than that the thing we were taught was entirely false.

          • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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            18 days ago

            I think we just don’t do as much critical introspection as we like to think.

            It’s definitely true, and it shows that the stuff you learn as kids is even more ingrained than we even notice most of the time. Kids don’t normally have blood drawn, so it’s not like elementary schools were filled with a bunch of kids saying “wait a minute, that didn’t happen with my last blood draw.”

            • ThunderQueen@lemmy.world
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              18 days ago

              There were actually about 5 of us that contested it and she tried to say “they drew that blood from your arteries”

        • WFloyd@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          My first thought was how ears and noses look red when sunlight shines through them. If blood was blue, wouldn’t they be blue or purple?

        • ThunderQueen@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          Veins appear blue because the skin and veins refract the light to permeating the skin causing the wavelenths to appear blue. It was well known in the early 2000s. She was just stupid and had no business teaching science.

      • ThunderQueen@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        We had the internet and a handful of us tried to contest it. She said “look at your textbooks, they clearly drew that blood from your arteries”