Publication | Open Access
Beneath Our Feet: Strategies for Locomotion in Granular Media
118
Citations
60
References
2014
Year
EngineeringGranular MediumRazor ClamsGeotechnical EngineeringKinesiologyDigging RegimesBiomechanicsHealth SciencesTheoretical EcologyGranular MediaBiological SystemsLocomotion (Animal Biomechanics)BiologyBipedal LocomotionMass MovementEvolutionary BiologyGeomechanicsAquatic OrganismHuman MovementMarine Biology
“If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.” Although Denis Healey's famous adage ( Metcalfe 2007 ) may offer sound advice for politicians, it is less relevant to worms, clams, and other higher organisms that rely on their digging ability for survival. In this article, we review recent work on the development of simple models that elucidate the fundamental principles underlying digging and burrowing strategies employed by biological systems. Four digging regimes are identified based on dimensionless digger size and the dimensionless inertial number. We select biological organisms to represent three of the four regimes: razor clams, sandfish, and nematodes. Models for all three diggers are derived and discussed, and analogies are drawn to low–Reynolds number swimmers.
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