Wandering meatloaf


Do you want to see a wandering meatloaf and his teeth? If you search around the shorelines of the North Pacific, you might get lucky and spot a “wandering meatloaf.

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Wandering meatloaf - Do you want to see a wandering meatloaf and his teeth? If you search around the shorelines of the North Pacific, you might get lucky and spot a “wandering meatloaf.

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The teeth of this ‘wandering meatloaf’ are formed of unusual materials.

You could get lucky and see a “wandering meatloaf,” a circular reddish-brown mollusk also known as the gumboot chiton or, more technically, Cryptochiton stelleri, if you scour the North Pacific shorelines. With its little but extremely gritty teeth, it trudges along coastlines scraping algae off rocks.

Scientists discovered that the stylus (the long, hollow structure that links the teeth to the soft membrane below) of this strange animal contained microscopic particles of santabarbaraite. This rare iron-based mineral had previously only been detected in genuine rocks. Santabarbaraite is the mineral that gives these mollusks their bite; it makes the root of their teeth light but incredibly powerful, and it’s one of the most rigid materials ever discovered in nature. The finding of how santabarbaraite integrates into chiton teeth might assist in developing 3-D printing technology, and aid scientists in better understand how they eat. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reported the findings.

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