March 25, 2013

"Think of a peanut between two molars, about to be crushed. At the precise millisecond the nut succumbs..."

"... the jaw muscles sense the yielding and reflexively let up. Without that reflex, the molars would continue to hurtle recklessly toward one another, now with no intact nut between. To keep your he-man jaw muscles from smashing your precious teeth, the only set you have, the body evolved an automated braking system faster and more sophisticated than anything on a Lexus. The jaw knows its own strength. The faster and more recklessly you close your mouth, the less force the muscles are willing to apply. Without your giving it a conscious thought."

Mary Roach writes about the science of chewing. She's a wonderfully fun writer. I've read 2 of her books — "Stiff" (about dead bodies) and "Bonk" (about sex) — and her new book is "Gulp," which I just pre-ordered for my Kindle. (As long as we're pre-ordering... "Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls.")

And here's "Gulp! The Quiz," where I learned that a certain celebrity had a "megacolon" — a colon two to three times normal size.

13 comments:

Æthelflæd said...

So before they evolved I guess everyone just had crushed molars.

edutcher said...

They needed to downshift into second.

Fritz said...

So, Elvis was fuller of shit than the average celebrity! I'm glad to add that to my stash of useless information.

Aridog said...

I am certainly glad to learn that the average person farts 22 times per day.

See, there really is purpose in reading blog stuff.

Sam L. said...

Like thongs--not goin' there.

Ann Althouse said...

"So, Elvis was fuller of shit than the average celebrity!"

Yes, and it might have killed him. That's pretty sad.

Elliott A said...

There are two reflexes involved in the abrupt end of muscle contraction. First is a reflex in the pulp of the tooth which senses the uneven compression on the chewing surface. Second is the periodontal ligament, your body's most sensitive touch organ, capable of feeling a thickness of 20 microns. The pulpal compression reflex is faster and is lost if a tooth requires a root canal. This loss leads to the inevitable fracture of the tooth unless it is protected with a crown. Also, the physics of the jaws is like that of a nutcracker, with much more force on the back molars than the front teeth.
It is about time Ann decided to post on a proper topic for discussion; teeth!

kentuckyliz said...

In width or length?

Was it from taking it up the tailpipe?

Fun with ever-larger rodents?

I Have Misplaced My Pants said...

Mary Roach rules. I did not know she has a new book coming out. Yay!

MadisonMan said...

I've a friend who used to do swallow studies at the VA Hospital. Fascinating work, and mostly stroke-related.

Charlie Currie said...

And here's "Gulp! The Quiz," where I learned that a certain celebrity had a "megacolon" — a colon two to three times normal size.

So anatomically he was a gorilla.

Cheers

Chip S. said...

Gulp's working title was Big Gulp, but they were afraid it'd be banned in NY.

Steven said...

So before they evolved I guess everyone just had crushed molars.

There wasn't an "everyone" when the jaw evolved.