Abstract
The curator of a police museum in Trondheim, Norway, recently discovered in his archive collection a glass bottle containing two irregularly shaped sugar lumps. A small hole had been bored into each of these lumps and a glass capillary tube, sealed at its tip, was embedded in one of the lumps (Fig. 1). A note attached to the exhibit translated as follows: “A piece of sugar containing anthrax bacilli, found in the luggage of Baron Otto Karl von Rosen, when he was apprehended in Karasjok in January 1917, suspected of espionage and sabotage”.
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References
Berg, R. Norway on its Own, 1905-1920 (Univ. Oslo Press, 1995).
Hugh-Jones, M. WickhamSteedandGermanbiologicalwarfareresearch. Intell. Nat. Security 7, 379–402 (1992).
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Redmond, C., Pearce, M., Manchee, R. et al. Deadly relic of the Great War. Nature 393, 747–748 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/31612
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/31612
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