…and he can regenerate lopped-off bits like a lizard, is that correct? Not just heal the bits of him that are left?
I was listening to NPR Science Friday and a guest referenced how Wolverine could “regenerate limbs.” I realized I think of what he has as his Healing Factor, but hadn’t considered how much regenerate-ability was baked into that.
Perhaps that would all be more relevant prior to getting Adamantium-infused. After that, his bits couldn’t be lopped off
Well, he survived and regenerated after atmospheric re-entry once, so that had to have taken him down to adamantium covered in charcoal for a while. Didn’t Xavier once have a plan to deal with a rogue Wolverine by chopping off his head and keeping it separate from his body until things stopped regrowing, or was that Batman?
Reminds me of the same sort of question being asked on BtVS: How many bits can you lop off a vampire before he dusts? Beheading them does it, but what if you start from the other end?
I’m pretty sure Wolverine has healed back from nuclear explosions and the like. Regenerating back from a single cell…
In the Ultimate universe, the Hulk ripped him in half, and he had to wander around until he found his legs and re-attached them. I think his healing factor works differently in this universe, though. Magneto kills him by having Cyclops and Iron Man blast him, then ripping the adamantium off his skeleton.
Has Wolverine ever double healed? Has he ever experiencing something like losing a leg and having it grow back - while at the same time having the missing leg grow a new body? If so, you’d end up with two Wolverines.
It raises the interesting question of what would happen if you decapitated Wolverine. Would his head grow a new body or would his body grow a new head? Or both?
In Uncanny X-Men Annual # 11, his body regenerated from a single drop of blood, though that was due to the help of some sort of magical crystal super-charging his power.
I don’t think Wolverine has done this, and he has bled copiously all over Earth 616. (Swamp Thing has, but only one half had full intelligence).
There was a Wolverine/Havok mini-series where most of his flesh was vaporized in a nuclear reactor (I may be misremembering the details) and it grew back around his metal skeleton from about a spoonful of remaining meat.
I remember a creepy vampire comic book from when I was a kid. A vampire in Africa was locked in his very strong coffin and couldn’t get out as carnivorous ants, which got in through a crack, devoured all of his flesh, leaving his skeleton. Turned out to be a blessing in disguise, as he was left with no heart which could be staked!
The first character that the words “healing factor” were applied to (that I know of, anyway) was Goodwin & Simonson’s version of Manhunter, in Detective Comics circa 1973. (It may be an old-hat concept in science fiction; I’m not that familiar with the genre.) Wonder Woman has used something called the “Purple Ray” since the 1940s for the same effect. Bezoars and the Philosopher’s Stone go back to the Middle Ages.
No, but Lobo (a Wolverine parody for most of his existence) has. There was a whole army of Lobos, once, each grown from a single drop of blood. (Then Dox altered his genetics to prevent that happening, and there were only two left - the original and one blood-clone who escaped the culling.)
It seems to me that the original description of the “healing factor” was that he could heal from anything a normal human could, just much more quickly. None of this regrowing limbs or coming back from a drop of blood nonsense.
Superpowers with defined and consistent limitations are so much more interesting than superpowers that the writers just go crazy with.
That whole Annual is very surreal. At the end, the X-Men reset to normal, and the memory of what happened substantially fades as if a dream. (Otherwise, Betsy would be made of metal, and in pieces.) It sort of makes sense–or good nonsense–in context.