Lost... In the Jungle of Doom Read Online Free Page B

Lost... In the Jungle of Doom
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be a stream not far away. You
    blunder off in search of one, bleeding heavily and dragging your wounded leg.
    Eventually you do find a fast-running stream, and the water does seem clean enough. But by this time you’ve lost a lot of blood. As you approach the stream, you realise
    you’re too weak to wash your wound. You slump down on the forest floor and pass out, never to regain consciousness.
    The end.

    Click here to return to the beginning and try again.
    Click here to find out tips about first aid.

Health and First Aid
    •  If you’re injured and the wound is bleeding a lot, the most important thing is to stop the bleeding. An average adult has about 6.25 litres of blood.
     Losing a half to a litre of blood will make an adult feel faint, losing about 2.25 litres can cause death.
    •  To stop a wound from bleeding, apply pressure with a bandage, or whatever material you have. But be careful not to tie it too tightly, or you could cut off
     the blood flow to the wound and end up doing more damage.
    •  Open wounds are at serious risk of infection in the rainforest’s damp, warm conditions, where there are lots of biting insects and bacteria breeds
     quickly. So it’s important to keep wounds clean.
    •  Even if you’re not wounded, keeping clean is vital in the jungle. For example, potentially fatal Chagas disease is transmitted by a blood-sucking
     insect that often poos next to where it’s punctured the skin. If you scratch the wound without cleaning it first, and the creature’s poo gets into it, you’ll become infected
     with the disease.
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Y our stomach growls as you trudge onwards, but you ignore it. You know that you can survive a long time without eating
    and you decide it’s not worth the risks just to stop a rumbling stomach.
    Click here .

Y ou walk along the trail, keeping an eye out for signs that humans might have come this way. You don’t see any, but
    after a while you sense something else. A terrible smell, like rotting rubbish, with a hint of burnt rubber. The smell gets worse as you hear a rumbling noise, and barking. Maybe it’s
    people with their hunting dogs, you think, hopefully . . . Suddenly there are what seems like hundreds of hairy pig-like animals hurtling towards you. Your wound makes it difficult for you to get
    out of the way of the creatures quickly enough, and, to make matters worse, you stagger and fall against one of the babies, which squeals! Barking and chattering their huge, tusk-like teeth, two
    of the animals attack you!
    The animals’ tusks are sharp and they attack viciously. Already wounded and weak, by the time the animals have gone you have lost a lot of blood. You sink to the forest
    floor, bleeding copiously.
    The end.

    Click here to return to the beginning and try again.
    Click here to learn more about white-lipped peccaries.

White-lipped Peccaries
    The herd of animals you encountered were white-lipped peccaries . . .
    •  Found throughout most of Central and South America, peccaries look like pigs, with long snouts for rooting, but in fact they’re not related to
     pigs.
    •  White-lipped peccaries are dark brown or black, covered in bristly hairs. They grow up to about 1.3 metres long and weigh up to 40 kilograms.
    •  They live in herds of at least twenty animals, but can number several hundred! They make barking sounds, and when they’re threatened they chatter
     their teeth.
    •  They give off a disgusting smell, similar to the smell of a skunk, which comes from scent glands on their backs. The smell helps the herd members identify
     one another.
    •  White-lipped peccaries are the biggest and most aggressive peccary species. They often attack and kill dogs, but they’re very rarely dangerous to
     humans.
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I n your eagerness to collect the fruit from the tree, you’ve forgotten to check the ground. You’re not the
    only one attracted by the
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