Glass on the other hand is ‘amorphous’, so it does not have any natural planes to split, or cleave to, making it much more suitable for making sharp edges.Ī type of naturally occurring glass that has already been in use since the Stone Age as a blade is obsidian. The difficulty is that diamond crystals tend to ‘cleave’ in what’s called an octahedral fashion, which doesn’t allow for a very sharp blade cross-section. The hardest material out there is diamond, so logically a diamond knife should be the sharpest type. So there is an element of practicality as well. The trade off, of course, as we’ve mentioned already in our article about Samurai swords, is that very sharp blades can be very brittle, and it’s no use to anyone if parts of a knife break off while it’s being used. Leaving aside our knives of course, there are many earnest scientific discussions/arguments on the web as to which material makes, or would make the sharpest blade. Which brings us to the oft discussed topic of the sharpest blade in the world. Even handling an obsidian scalpel takes great care because one can unknowingly cut themselves without pain because the laceration is so fine.If anyone has earned the right to be a bit nerdy about knives, then it’s us. Under a microscope, an obsidian scalpel divides individual cells in half, while steel scalpel incisions look like they were made by a chainsaw. The smaller the angstrom, the finer the blade.Ī household razor blade (King Gillette produced the first safety shaving blade in 1904) is about 300-600 angstroms, while an obsidian blade is about 30 angstroms. Angstroms are a unit of measurement between atomic planes in a crystal. Obsidian can produce cutting edges many times finer than the best steel… and obsidian blades first produced about 2,500 years ago in Mesoamerica can still cut today. Reusability is cost-efficient, but sharpness produces cleaner and more precise cuts with quicker healing and less scarring. However, obsidian… a type of volcanic glass… has re-emerged. Stainless steel later took over, due to its reusability and resistance to corrosion. Years ago, most scalpels were made of nickel or chromium-plated carbon steel. Other features like shape, balance, uniformity and dependability are critical. After the 1st and 2nd World Wars, the American industry caught up in manufacturing leadership.Īs elective surgery rose to prominence, the individual needs out of a scalpel have morphed and now must meet certain requirements. For a time period, barber-surgeons were prominent in the US, embellishing their scalpels as part of the art of their craft. America historically has always imported knives. Surgical instrument-making, as a profession, was noted in the 18 th century in England, France, Holland and Germany. Roman surgeons relied on armorers who made cutlery for wartime as well. Copper in 3500 BC, bronze and iron in 1400 BC. How the scalpel was made has varied over time.īlades were initially composed of sharpened stones like flint, jade or obsidian, but metal blades replaced them. ![]() Interestingly, the shape of the scalpel likely has not changed much over time. Wounds happen on the battlefield while incisions happen in the operating room, so “scalpel” implies security associated with healing. Furthermore, a “knife” can be used by anybody, but a “scalpel” is only used by a surgeon. If anyone else takes a knife to another person, it’s a criminal attack. “Knife” connotes danger and is more likened to a weapon associated with mutilation and death. ![]() Modern surgeons have embraced the term “scalpel” over “knife”. ![]() “Scalpel” comes from the Latin word, “scallpellus”. Hippocrates may have been the first to describe the surgical knife, termed the “macairion”, a smaller version of a Lacedaemonian sword called a “machaira”. Flint knives were used as scrapers to cut through the skull in trepanation. It’s evolved, changing form, to meet our needs.Įvidence of knives used in medicine may be traced to the Mesolithic period around 8000 BC. The knife is hypothesized to have existed for more than 2 million years, longer than modern humans have walked the Earth. Amongst the list of the most useful tools in human history, the knife is usually at the top.
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