snake. On September 26, 1957, Schmidt was bitten by a juvenile
boomslang snake (
Dispholidus typus) at his lab at the Field Museum.
Marlin Perkins, the director of the
Lincoln Park Zoo, had sent the snake to Schmidt's lab for identification. Schmidt wrongly believed that the snake could not produce a fatal dose because of its age and the fact that boomslangs are
rear-fanged. The bite occurred because he held the snake in an unsafe manner, "too far behind the head." Boomslang venom causes
disseminated intravascular coagulation, a condition in which so many small clots form in the blood that the victim loses the ability to clot further and bleeds to death. Later that evening, Schmidt felt slightly ill. By the next morning, the lethal effects of the venom rapidly became evident. He did not report to work, and at noon, he reported to the museum that he was very ill. Following the bite, he took detailed notes on the symptoms that he experienced, almost until death. He collapsed at his home in
Homewood, Illinois, bleeding in his lungs, kidneys, heart, and brain, and was dead on arrival at
Ingalls Memorial Hospital. ==Legacy==