Bulletproof Feathers: How Science Uses Nature's Secrets to Design Cutting-Edge Technology

by Robert Allen

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"Though they may sound like the stuff of science fiction, in fact such inventions represent only the most recent iterations of natural mechanisms that are billions of years old - the focus of the rapidly growing field of biomimetics. Based on the realization that natural selection has for countless eons been conducting trial-and-error experiments with the laws of physics, chemistry, material science, and engineering, biomimetics takes nature as its laboratory, looking to the most successful show more developments and strategies of an array of plants and animals as a source of technological innovation and ideas. Thus the lotus flower, with its waxy, water-resistant surface, gives us stainproofing; the feathers of raptors become transformable airplane wings; and the nerve-deadening serrations on a mosquito's proboscis are adapted to hypodermics."--pub. desc. show less

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Genres
Science & Nature, Nonfiction, Technology, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
570.1Natural sciences & mathematicsBiologyLife Science: Biology, Cells & GeneticsTheory And Instruction
LCC
QP517 .B56 .B86SciencePhysiologyPhysiologyAnimal biochemistry
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2