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Mechanical Design of Structural Materials in Animals explores the
principles underlying how molecules interact to produce the
functional attributes of biological materials: their strength and
stiffness, ability to absorb and store energy, and ability to
resist the fatigue that accrues through a lifetime of physical
insults. These attributes play a central role in determining the
size and shape of animals, the ways in which they can move, and how
they interact with their environment. By showing how structural
materials have been designed by evolution, John Gosline sheds
important light on how animals work. Gosline elucidates the
pertinent theories for how molecules are arranged into
macromolecular structures and how those structures are then built
up into whole organisms. In particular, Gosline develops the theory
of discontinuous, fiber-reinforced composites, which he employs in
a grand synthesis to explain the properties of everything from the
body wall of sea anemones to spiders' silks and insect cuticles,
tendons, ligaments, and bones. Although the theories are examined
in depth, Gosline's elegant discussion makes them accessible to
anyone with an interest in the mechanics of life. Focusing on the
materials from which animals are constructed, this book answers
fundamental questions about mechanical properties in nature.
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