At one time hatters (the correct word for hat makers) used Mercury in preparing the skins used to make hats and to get sharp corners in the hats they chewed on the skins. This caused ingestion of the mercury, which is a neurotoxin. They eventually developed mercury poisoning, which affected their brains causing a form of chemically induced madness.
They didn't go mad. Beaver hats are still made and there are no mad hatters
They didn't go mad. Beaver hats are still made and there are no mad hatters
They didn't go mad. There is nothing from a dead beaver belt that would cause a reaction.
Hat makers became crazy from the fumes produced by mercury-soaked felt.
go to a dam...... shoot a beaver use the backside as a hat then give the rest to pitbulls or something.
You could go to Westminter Mall and go in to the Disney store.
The old hat making process involved intensive use of the element mercury (called quicksilver back in the day). Mercury fumes are incredibly toxic, and can cause severe neurological damage. The phrase mad as a hatter comes from how many hatters (hat makers) would die or go crazy at a young age due to mercury exposure from their work.
Les Miles goes by The Hat, and The Mad Hatter.
Ming Beaver Kwei goes by Beaver.
There is nothing in the text of the original Alice books to suggest that the Hatter is a crazy murderer.However, the character who appears in the Batman comics is a murderer and, if his time spent in the Arkham Asylum is anything to go by, is also very crazy.The Mad Hatter was probably a reference to an old saying "mad as a hatter", which was a reference itself, to the 'madness' that hat makers were prone to, at the time. Some of the chemicals involved in making certain kinds of hats were intoxicating and could have narcotic-like effects on the people in contact with it.
Broderick Beaver went by Brody.
Laura Beaver goes by Lauralie, and Laur.