Home › Forums › Wonders of Creation › Squirrels vs Cats
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November 28, 2011 11:26 pm at 11:26 pm #600872feivelParticipant
this is actually copied from within another post appearing in the wonders of creation section here
ever wonder why cats can climb up trees but cant get down, yet squirrels can zip right down trees and poles head first as easily as they go up.
both of them have front and back claws which dig quite well into wood, whats the difference?
answer to follow, b’li neder
November 29, 2011 12:08 am at 12:08 am #830817feivelParticipantwell squirrels used to go up trees but they could never come down again
so after a million years of squirrels stuck in trees, some cosmic rays, mutations, and other birth defects decided in their wisdom to create an unbelievably complex ankle system of tarsals metatarsals muscles nerves, and a brilliant arrangement of tendons that allow the back ankles to turn around 180 degrees and operate under complete control in the exact opposite direction that the ankles turn to go up the tree!
Evolution apparently decided the cats did not deserve such an arrangement, after consulting with some mice.
November 29, 2011 1:04 am at 1:04 am #830818pops, did you google the answer??;)
November 29, 2011 4:20 am at 4:20 am #830819ronrsrMemberfor a truly amazing backward/forward foot arrangement, check out the gecko, which can walk up and down glass with ease.
November 29, 2011 5:14 pm at 5:14 pm #830820feivelParticipantThe secret behind the gecko’s extraordinary wall-climbing ability is a unique quick-release mechanism that allows it to adhere strongly to a surface, but then detach with ease.
Researchers in the US say that the mechanism could be used to make advanced glues or even car braking systems.
Geckos get their adhesive ability from sticky hairs – called setae – that cover the lizards’ toes. But the stickiness is unlike conventional adhesives, which either adhere weakly and detach with ease like Post-it notes, or are strong and hard to remove like duct tape. By contrast, gecko hairs paradoxically adhere strongly yet detach easily.
Bizarre solution:
To find out what makes this possible, Keller Autumn, a biologist at the Lewis & Clark College in Oregon, US, and colleagues measured the force required to detach gecko hairs from a surface, and how that force changed according to the angle at which it is applied.
When the force causes the hairs to lie at an angle of about 30 degrees to the horizontal, they can resist enormous forces. “Geckos are vastly over-engineered,” says Autumn. “One gecko could resist the weight of 130 kilograms.” At angles of over 90 degrees, however, the hairs easily became detached.
And because the hairs are solid structures, they are not damaged in this process and can be used repeatedly.
Autumn told New Scientist: “It’s such a bizarre solution to an engineering problem. No one would have ever thought of it if it hadn’t evolved in geckos.”
Gecko adhesive is so effective that he believes it could one day find use in car braking systems. He calculates it could stop a car travelling at 80 kilometres per hour in a distance of just 5 metres, using just one third of a square metre.
once again modern technology fails to accomplish what blind, random, unplanned birth defects are able to.
mutations: we salute you!
November 29, 2011 5:39 pm at 5:39 pm #830821BTGuyParticipantI can only say that squirrels are rats with good public relations.
November 29, 2011 5:47 pm at 5:47 pm #830822always runs with scissors fastParticipantSorry but this has to be said
DO YOU REALLY NOT HAVE ANYTHING MORE IMPORTANT TO THINK ABOUT????
or was this suppose to be comical? In that case I am also laughing with you!
November 29, 2011 5:59 pm at 5:59 pm #830823feivelParticipantDO YOU REALLY NOT HAVE ANYTHING MORE IMPORTANT TO THINK ABOUT????
and what is more important to talk about than the wonders of The Boreh? the endless signs of wisdom, plan, purpose and kindness that The Boreh implanted in the world, DAFKA that we should study them, wonder at their cunning and magnificence, and speak about them?
the Chovos Levavos devotes an entire shaar to the subject of why we are OBLIGATED to do so, by the Torah and by reason.
no, none of this is intented to be comical.
it is intended to take your breath away.
November 29, 2011 6:52 pm at 6:52 pm #830824wanderingchanaParticipantDo squirrels always land on their feet like cats can?
The echidna is also remarkable with its two sets of inward-facing paws that dig into the ground and make it impossble for a predator to dig them out (or want to, considering the spikes on its back).
November 29, 2011 7:17 pm at 7:17 pm #830825always runs with scissors fastParticipantfeivel I am sorry. you are right.
November 30, 2011 2:08 am at 2:08 am #8308262scentsParticipantRabbi Avigdor miller focused a lot on these thoughts. He has detailed a lot of similar happy accidents (mutations) that enabled these great things.
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