Tuesday 13 December 2011

Black mamba killed Wing student in South Africa - inquest

Nathan Layton and Laura Woolley Mr Layton had travelled to South Africa with his girlfriend, Laura Woolley
A Buckinghamshire student training to be a safari guide in South Africa died after being bitten by a black mamba snake, an inquest has heard.
Nathan Layton, 28, from Wing, was bitten as he was putting the snake in a glass jar at the Wildlife College in Hoedspruit in March 2008.
The inquest in Dunstable, Bedfordshire, heard that Mr Layton had not realised he had been bitten.
In a narrative verdict, coroner David Morris said it was "a great tragedy".
The snake had been spotted in a corridor at the college close to a classroom.
Because it was in a location where students would be passing, arrangements were made to remove it.

Black mamba

  • Black mambas come in a variety of colours, from pale grey to beige.
  • Their name is derived from the colour of their mouths rather than their skin.
  • Highly venomous, black mambas are famed for being the fastest and most dangerous snakes in Africa.
  • The mamba's venom contains a powerful neurotoxin which works by preventing impulses from travelling along the nerves.
  • The victim becomes paralysed and death occurs through respiratory failure.
Source: BBC Nature
A member of staff put it in a plastic box and Mr Layton then helped instructor Nellie De Kock to put it in a glass jar.
In a statement, Ms De Kock said that at no point was she aware the snake had bitten Mr Layton, though he did say the snake had brushed against him.
She said about an hour later Mr Layton complained of blurred vision and a few seconds later he collapsed on the floor.
He suffered a cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at the scene.
A post-mortem examination revealed that he had died from snake bite poisoning.
Mr Layton and his girlfriend had left the UK in January 2008 to go on the year-long course.

1 comment:

Michael said...

Poor kid. Black mamba snakes are indeed deadly and dangerously fast. If only he was given an antidote right after he was "apparently brushed" by the snake, he could have been one of the few who had actually survived from such bite. Source: http://www.blackmambas.net/

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