Snails' Teeth Beats Spider Silk as Nature's Strongest Material (2015)
www.smithsonianmag.com - 54 poäng - 27 kommentarer - 5052 sekunder sedan
Kommentarer (8)
- - 113 sekunder sedan
- RajT88 - 4023 sekunder sedan> 3,300 one-pound bags of sugar
Ah, but how many one pound bags of concrete could it hold??
Why bags of anything? This is a poor way of communicating weight. Just say "a modern passenger car".
- hedgehog - 2954 sekunder sedanI wanted to see some pictures, this paper has good ones:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.10332
If you put your finger in front of a garden slug it may try to eat it, it's a very odd sand-paper sensation but I never knew why.
- ziofill - 2046 sekunder sedan> Thats’s comparable to a single strand of spaghetti holding up about 3,300 one-pound bags of sugar
What an odd example. A mid-sized car would have been much clearer.
- somedude895 - 3773 sekunder sedanAll I wanted was to see a picture of a snail's tooth.
- imzadi - 3350 sekunder sedanSnails had a good run being ignored by everyone but the French and now we're smearing their slime on our faces and trying to turn their teeth into armor.
- black6 - 4078 sekunder sedan[2015], with a nice correction from 2017 about the differences between compressive and tensile strength.
- cwmoore - 2540 sekunder sedanWhich is the less intelligent? Strong works when dumb.
I know people like to talk about “how smart” the butterfly or whatever is for “adapting itself” to whatever environment, and it is cute, but there is a practical engineering choice between delicate design and brute force.
Nördnytt! 🤓