Vampires were very real to people in the past, but there are many ways science can explain their characteristics, whether they come from folklore or fiction.
But many modern notions of vampires started with the 1700s media frenzy and continued with "Dracula" and other tales.
"It's not like a vampire disease where people are wandering the earth for years and years getting to look more and more like vampires," he said.
AdvertisementAdvertisementWhile sunlight sapped the count's powers, it was not until the 1922 film "Nosferatu" that the sun's rays killed vampires.
As scientists began to learn and understand more about the body and death, stories about vampires started to evolve.
Persons:
—, Varney, Michael Hefferon, They're, Hefferon, Michael Bell, Bram Stoker, Dracula, Stoker, Vlad the, Abraham Van Helsing, Vlad III, Vlad, Bram Stoker's, Emily Gerard, Marion McGarry, Charlotte, Charlotte Stoker's, McGarry, sickles, Mercy Bell, she'd, bloating, John Polidori, debonair Lord Ruthven, Lord Byron, Ruthven
Organizations:
Service, Getty, Dermatology
Locations:
Serbia, Vienna, Berlin, Paris, London, Romania, Serbian, Austria, Poland, Exeter , Rhode Island