Rolling and wheels in the natural world

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A wagon wheel
A wheel on a cart

There are two ways that natural and man-made things can use rotation to move around. One way is for the entire thing to roll. The other way is for part of the thing to turn while the rest does not, like a wheel or a propeller. Some living things move around by rolling, but no living things seem to use wheels. Biologists have written about the reasons for this.[1][2] Writers of science fiction and fantasy have invented many animals with wheels.[3][4]

Wheels are a very useful technology for people. Many technologies that people use are also found in nature, like wings and lenses. It may seem strange, then, that wheels have never evolved in nature, but there are two reasons for this. First, there are natural limits to what kinds of things can exist in nature. Living things change slowly over time, a process called evolution by natural selection. This process can create many different answers to a problem, but it can't always create every answer that can be imagined. Also, the ways that new living things build themselves (a process called developmental biology) can't always create every kind of part that can be imagined. Second, wheels are sometimes less useful than other ways of moving, like walking, running, or slithering like a snake.[5] For the same reason, some groups of people in the past have given up using wheels completely.[6]

Known examples of rolling and wheels in living things[change | change source]

Rolling[change | change source]

A curled-up pangolin
The pangolin Manis temminckii curled into a ball, in which it can roll

Some living things move around by rolling. These are not true examples of wheels, because the whole organism rotates, without any parts that stay still, like an axle.[7]

Some kinds of animals form their bodies into a circle. In some cases, they do this to protect themselves, and in some cases they do it to be able to roll. Animals that do this include some caterpillars, tiger beetle larvae, myriapods, mantis shrimp, and salamanders.[5][7][8] Other animals form into a ball instead. These animals include pangolins, hedgehogs, armadillos, the armadillo Lizard, isopods, the wheel spider, and fossilized trilobites.[8][9] These animals may roll passively, meaning they are pushed by gravity or wind, or actively, meaning they push themselves by changing their shape.[8] Tumbleweeds are a part of a plant that grows above the ground. Tumbleweeds break off from their roots and roll in the wind in order to spread their seeds.

Dung beetles form round balls of animal feces. They roll these balls with their bodies. Although the ball rolls instead of the beetle, the beetles have many of the same problems as rolling animals.[8]

A kind of skin cell called a keratinocyte moves itself by rolling, as part of the process of healing.[10][11]

A kind of tiny animal called a rotifer uses a ring of cilia (small hair-like parts) moving in rhythm to move and feed itself. The word "rotifer" in Latin means "having wheels", but rotifers do not actually have any parts that rotate.[12]

Rotation like a wheel[change | change source]

No known multicellular organism (an organism made of many cells) can spin part of its body while keeping the rest of its body still. However, there are at least two examples of rotating parts used by cells.[13] One example is a molecule called ATP synthase. ATP synthase is used to store and move energy. For example, it is used in the processes of photosynthesis (a way of storing energy from the sun) and oxidative phosphorylation (a way of releasing stored energy).[14] ATP synthase is similar to flagellar motors, which are talked about below.[15] Biologists (scientists who study life) think that ATP synthase is an example of modular evolution. In modular evolution, two parts with different jobs join together and pick up a new job.[16]

Diagram of a bacterial flagellum
The bacterial flagellum—a true example of a rotating part in a living thing

The only known example in nature of a part that can spin all the way around to push an organism is the flagellum. The flagellum is a tail used like a propeller to push single-celled prokaryotes. The bacterial flagellum is the best known example.[6][17] About half of all known bacteria have at least one flagellum. This means that rotation may actually be the most common way of moving around found in nature.[18]

At the bottom of the bacterial flagellum, where it meets the cell membrane, a motor protein acts as an engine. This engine gets its power from proton motive force, the flow of protons (hydrogen ions) across the cell membrane. This is caused by a concentration gradient (a difference in the number of protons on each side of the membrane) created by the cell's metabolism. (Bacteria called Vibrio use two kinds of flagella, one of which is powered by sodium ions instead.)[19] Flagella are very efficient, meaning not much energy is wasted. They can push bacteria as fast as 60 times their length every second. The motor at the bottom of the flagellum has a similar structure to ATP synthase.[13] Bacteria called spirillum have twisted bodies with flagella on both ends. Spririllum bacteria spin around as they move.[20]

A kind of organism called archaea, which are different from bacteria, also use flagella powered by rotating motor proteins. The two kinds of flagella evolved from different parts.[21] Eukaryotic cells are a more complex kind of cell found in plants and animals. Some of these cells also have flagella called cilia, but these flagella do not rotate at the bottom. Instead, they bend so that the tip of the flagella moves in a circle.[22]

Barriers to wheels in biology[change | change source]

Limits of evolution[change | change source]

Picture of a fitness landscape
A picture of a fitness landscape, a kind of map that shows how different changes make an organism better or worse at surviving and reproducing. The points A, B, and C are called local optima, which means they are better than all the points near them. The arrows point in the direction that a population can move, if it evolves by natural selection. Populations can only move up. Even if there is a better point, a population cannot move to it if it would have to go down to get there, as in moving from point A to point B.

The science of evolution can help to explain why multicellular organisms have not developed wheels. To put it simply, a complex structure (one made of several parts working together) can't evolve unless its early, unfinished form helps the organism to live and to have children.[1][2]

In the modern science of evolution, adaptations (changes that affect the fitness of an organism) appear slowly, over many generations, by means of natural selection. Because of this, genetic changes usually only spread in a population if they do not lower the fitness of individuals.[1] Neutral changes (changes that don't raise or lower fitness) can spread by genetic drift.[23] In some cases, changes that lower fitness can spread,[24] but large changes that take many steps can only spread if each of the steps raises fitness. The biologist Richard Dawkins describes the situation this way:

"The wheel may be one of those cases where the engineering solution can be seen in plain view, yet be unattainable in evolution because it lies [on] the other side of a deep valley, cutting unbridgeably across the massif of Mount Improbable."[1]

In this metaphor, fitness is a landscape, where useful traits are peaks and harmful ones are valleys. Wheels may be a very useful peak, but the valley around that peak is too low or too wide for the gene pool (the set of genes in the population) to move to it by genetic drift or natural selection. Stephen Jay Gould points out that evolution can only build with parts that are already available. He writes that, "wheels work well, but animals are debarred [(prevented)] from building them by structural constraints [(limits)] inherited as an evolutionary legacy."[2]

Natural selection therefore explains why wheels have not appeared. A wheel without one or more of its important parts would probably not help an organism very much. However, the same is not true for the flagellum discussed above. As the flagellum evolved, different parts of other structures were used for a new purpose. The part that is now a rotating motor, called a basal body, may have evolved from a part that was used by bacteria to inject poisons into other cells.[25][26][27] This use of existing parts is called exaptation.[28]

The biologist Robin Holliday has written that, because there are no living things with wheels, creationism and intelligent design (stories of life that claim an intelligent creator) are less likely to be right. Holliday argues that an intelligent creator, free from the limits of evolution, would use wheels in any place they would be useful.[29]

Limits of bodies and how they grow[change | change source]

People have found it fairly easy to build wheeled systems, even complex ones, and they have been able to solve problems of power transmission (moving energy from one place to another) and friction. However, the ways new organisms build themselves are very different from the ways humans build things. It is not clear that the processes of life would be able to make a wheel. The reasons for this are talked about below.1

The greatest barrier to many-celled organisms with wheels is the interface (meeting point) between the parts that move and the parts that stay still. Wheels, or wheels and axles, need to be able to turn freely relative to the rest of the organism. Animal joints have a limited range of motion (the angle they can move), but wheels need to be able to turn through any angle without needing to be turned back. Because of this, wheels can't be attached to the axle or shaft that they turn on.[2] No true many-celled organism is known to grow solid tissues or organs that are not attached to the rest of the organism.

Sending power to wheels[change | change source]

Drawing of human arm muscles
Skeletal muscle, attached at each end to bone

To drive a wheel (that is, to make it turn), something must put a torque (twisting force) on it. For machines made by people, this torque is usually made by a motor. There are many kinds of motors, such as electric motors, turbines, and steam engines. Torque can also come from a person, as with a bicycle. In animals, movement is usually caused by skeletal muscles. These muscles get energy by metabolizing (breaking down) the nutrients in food. Skeletal muscles are attached with connective tissue to the bones they move, so they would not be useful for driving a wheel directly. Also, animals use their muscles in cycles - joints move in one direction, then the other, instead of moving in one direction constantly. Large animals cannot gain speed very quickly, because it is more difficult for muscles to pull against a large inertia (the resistance of a heavy object to movement).[30]

Friction[change | change source]

In most machines, a lubricant (like oil or grease) or a bearing is used to limit friction (rubbing) between moving parts. Keeping friction down is important for limiting wear damage to the parts, and for keeping the parts from getting too hot. The faster the parts move, or the more force between them, the more important it is to reduce friction. In animal joints like the human knee, friction is reduced with a tissue called cartilage that has a low coefficient of friction, and a lubricating fluid called synovial fluid that has a low viscosity (resistance to flowing). Gerhard Scholtz, a professor at the [Institut für Biologie Vergleichende Zoologie] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) ("Institute for Biology and Comparative Zoology") at Humboldt University of Berlin, has written that a similar lubricating fluid or material from dead cells could help an animal wheel to turn freely, but something like this has never been seen in nature.[8]

Moving nutrients and waste to and from a wheel[change | change source]

Another problem is the flow of materials to and from a living wheel. If the tissues that form the wheel are living, then they must receive oxygen and nutrients and have wastes taken away in order to continue metabolism (the process of using energy to maintain functioning). A normal animal circulatory system (the network of tubes that allow blood to flow), would not be able to provide for the necessary flow of materials.[1][31] Without blood flowing, materials would have to diffuse to and from the wheel. Diffusion is limited by partial pressure and surface area, by a rule called Fick's law of diffusion.[2] For large animals, diffusion would not be enough to keep tissues alive.[6] Instead of a living wheel, a wheel could be made of dead material like keratin, which makes up hair and nails.[6][8]

Problems with wheels[change | change source]

Sidewinders have a unique way of moving on sand. It is very effective

In some environments, wheels are simply not as good as limbs for getting around.[1] So it may be that, even if it were possible for wheels to evolve, they would not be found often in nature. In fact, given the limits of wheels, the main question can be turned around: instead of asking "Why doesn't nature use wheels?", the question becomes "Why don't people build more machines with limbs?"[6] In engineering, wheels are often used instead of limbs, because limbs are more complex to design and control—not because wheels necessarily do the job better.[32][33]

Efficiency[change | change source]

Rolling resistance[change | change source]

Picture of the forces acting on a wheel
A wheel rolling over soft ground changes the shape of the ground. This causes a "reaction force" N from the ground, which partly pushes back against the motion.

On hard, flat ground, like paved roads, hard wheels are more energy efficient than other ways of moving around. However, wheels are not as efficient (they take more energy to move) on soft surfaces, like soils, because they have to deal with "rolling resistance". In rolling resistance, a vehicle loses energy as the shape of the wheel and the surface are deformed (changed), and the surface pushes back against the wheel. Smaller wheels have to deal with more resistance for their size than larger wheels.[31] Softer surfaces deform more than hard surfaces, and they don't come back to their starting shape as well. This causes greater resistance. Compared to concrete, the resisting force on medium-hard soil can be five to eight times greater, and on sand it can be ten to fifteen times greater.[6] While wheels must deform the surface along their entire path, limbs only cause a small deformation at the point that the foot touches the ground.

Rolling resistance is also the reason that some human civilizations didn't use wheels. During the Roman Empire, wheeled chariots were common in the Middle East and North Africa. However, when the Empire fell, wheels became less useful to the local people, who turned to camels to transport goods in the sandy desert climate. Stephen Jay Gould wrote about this strange fact of history in his book Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes. He wrote that without maintained roads, camels needed less human power and water than a cart pulled by oxen.[34]

Efficiency of movement in water[change | change source]

When moving in water, rotating mechanisms are more efficient only when the Reynolds number of the flow is very low. The Reynolds number is a way to describe the behavior of a flow—in a flow with a low Reynolds number, like those in which bacteria move, viscosity is the most important effect to consider. In flows with high Reynolds numbers, inertia is the most important effect, and mechanisms that oscillate, or move back and forth, are more efficient. Although ship propellers usually have an efficiency near 60%, and aircraft propellers around 80% (up to 88% in the human-powered Gossamer Condor), oscillating foils like fish tails and bird wings can be as efficient as 96%−98%.[6][31]

Traction[change | change source]

Wheels can slip, meaning they fail to get a grip, on loose or slippery ground. Slipping wastes energy, and can lead to loss of control or becoming unable to move. This happens to cars on mud, ice, and snow. Where wheels have this problem, people sometimes use other mechanisms instead. In the logging industry, vehicles with legs are sometimes used to reach areas that are more difficult than what wheels can deal with.[35] Vehicles with tracks, like tanks, don't slip as much as vehicles with wheels, because they have a larger area touching the surface. However, vehicles with tracks often have a larger turning radius than wheeled vehicles, meaning they take more space to turn. They are also less efficient, and more complex to build.[36]

Dealing with obstacles[change | change source]

The engineer Mieczysław G. Bekker showed that in natural terrain, small obstacles are much more common than large ones. This is called a "log-normal" distribution. This means that obstacles are a problem for wheeled vehicles of all sizes.[31] The main ways of dealing with obstacles are to go around them, and to go over them.

Going around obstacles[change | change source]

The most common types of steering do not include separate articulation (joints for bending) for each wheel, so they have a limited turning radius. This limits how well these kinds of vehicles can move around where there are a large number of obstacles.[37]

Michael LaBarbera of the University of Chicago shows the limited turning radius of wheels by comparing humans walking with humans in wheelchairs.[31] Jared Diamond points out that most examples of rolling in nature are found in wide open, hard terrain. This includes the use of rolling by dung beetles and tumbleweeds.[6]

Going over obstacles[change | change source]

Wheels are bad at dealing with vertical (upright) obstacles, especially obstacles about the same size as the wheel itself. If a vehicle or animal can move its center of mass, then the largest vertical obstacles that can be climbed are half as high as the wheel.[6] If the center of mass cannot be moved, the highest obstacle that can be climbed is one eighth to one quarter the height of the wheel.[31]

Also, without joints, a wheeled vehicle can become stuck (unable to move) on top of an obstacle, with the obstacle between the wheels so they don't touch the ground.[38] Limbs, unlike wheels, are useful for climbing, and can deal with difficult terrain.[31]

For wheels without joints, climbing obstacles will cause the body of the vehicle to tilt. If the weight of the vehicle moves outside of the wheels, the vehicle can tip over because of static instability.[39] At high speed, a vehicle's inertia can cause it to become dynamically unstable. This means it can be tipped over by a smaller obstacle, or simply by turning or changing speed too quickly.[40] Without jointed limbs, it can be impossible to recover from being tipped over.

Use of limbs for different jobs[change | change source]

Limbs used by animals to move over terrain are often also used for other purposes, such as holding and manipulating things, climbing, swinging from branches, swimming, digging, jumping, throwing, kicking, and grooming. Without joints, wheels are not as useful as limbs for these jobs.[31]

Rolling and wheeled creatures in fiction and legend[change | change source]

Rolling creatures[change | change source]

The hoop snake is an animal described in legend in the United States and Australia.[5] The snake is said to hold its tail in its mouth and roll like a wheel towards its victims. The Japanese Tsuchinoko is a similar legendary animal.[41]

The 1944 science fiction short story "Arena", by Fredric Brown, includes a telepathic (mind-reading) alien called an "Outsider". The Outsider is shaped like a ball and moves by rolling.[42] A 1967 Star Trek episode with the same name was based on the story. A 1964 episode of The Outer Limits called "Fun and Games" may have been based on the same story. Neither television episode included a rolling animal.[43]

The Dutch artist M. C. Escher invented an animal that he named Pedalternorotandomovens centroculatus articulosus. This animal was able to roll itself forward like a wheel. Escher drew the animal in his 1951 picture [Wentelteefje] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) (also known by the English title Curl-up).[8][44]

A 1956 Scrooge McDuck comic by Carl Barks, Land Beneath the Ground!, included "Terries" and "Fermies", characters who move from place to place by rolling like a bowling ball. The Terries and Fermies have turned their rolling into a sport, causing earthquakes in the process.[45][46][47]

Tuf Voyaging, a 1986 science fiction novel by George R. R. Martin, includes a type of alien called a "Rolleram", which kills its victim by rolling over it.[48][49]

In the Sonic the Hedgehog video game series, the main character Sonic and his sidekick Tails move by rolling. The Sonic the Hedgehog series first appeared in 1991.[50][51]

The 1995 short story "Microbe", by Kenyon College biologist and feminist science fiction writer Joan Slonczewski, is about a trip to explore an alien world, where the plant and animal life is entirely made of doughnut-shaped organisms.[52]

Wheeled creatures[change | change source]

A picture of a "Wheeler" in L. Frank Baum's Ozma of Oz

L. Frank Baum's 1907 children's book Ozma of Oz includes human-like creatures with wheels instead of hands and feet, called "Wheelers".[3]

The 1968 novel The Goblin Reservation by Clifford D. Simak includes an intelligent kind of alien that uses natural wheels.[53]

Piers Anthony's 1977 book Cluster and its sequels (the later books in the same series) include a type of aliens called Polarians. The Polarians move around by holding and balancing on a large ball. The ball is a living part of the Polarian's body that can be removed temporarily.[54]

David Brin's Uplift Universe includes a kind of wheeled alien called the G'Kek. The G'Kek are described in the 1995 novel Brightness Reef. In the 1996 novel Infinity's Shore, the G'Kek are said to look like "a squid in a wheelchair." They suffer from arthritis in their axles as they become old, especially when living in an environment with high gravity.[55][56]

A 1997 novel in the Animorphs series, The Andalite Chronicles, includes a kind of aliens called Mortrons. The Mortrons are made of two separate living parts: a yellow and black bottom half with four wheels, and a long, red head with sharp teeth and hidden wings.[57]

The 2000 novel The Amber Spyglass, by English author Philip Pullman, includes a type of alien known as the Mulefa. The Mulefa have diamond-shaped (◊-shaped) bodies with one leg at the front and back and one leg on each side. The Mulefa use large, disc-shaped seed pods as wheels. They hold the pods on axles made of bone on their front and back legs, while pushing themselves with their side legs. The Mulefa and the seed pod trees have a symbiotic relationship, or a relationship that helps both sides: the Mulefa use the seed pods as wheels, and the seed pod trees depend on the rolling to crack open the pods and allow the seeds to spread.[4]

In the 2000 novel Wheelers, by English mathematician Ian Stewart and biologist Jack Cohen, a kind of alien called "blimps" can grow machines called "wheelers", which use wheels to move.[58][59]

The 2009 Disney children's television series Jungle Junction includes jungle animals with wheels instead of legs. One of these animals, "Ellyvan", is a hybrid (a combination) of an elephant and a van.[60] These animals move around their home on highways.

Notes[change | change source]

1.^ Even though evolution and biology get in the way of animals growing wheels, animals can still use other objects as wheels. This can be done by instinct (knowledge that an animal is born with, like dung beetles), or by intelligent animals like humans using tools.
2.^ There are two kinds of wheels: passive and driven. A passive wheel simply rolls freely over a surface, lowering friction when compared with dragging. A driven wheel is powered, and sends energy to the surface to generate a pushing force.

References[change | change source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Dawkins, Richard (November 24, 1996). "Why don't animals have wheels?". Sunday Times. Archived from the original on February 21, 2007. Retrieved 2008-10-29.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Gould, Stephen Jay (1981). "Kingdoms without wheels". Natural History. 90 (3). New York: 42–48. ISSN 0028-0712.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Baum, Lyman Frank; John Rea Neill (illustrator) (1907). Ozma of Oz. Oz. Vol. 3. Chicago: The Reilly & Britton Co. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-1-173-24727-0.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Pullman, Philip (2000). The Amber Spyglass. His Dark Materials. Vol. 3. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-84673-1.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Full, Robert; Earls, Kathleen; Wong, Mary; Caldwell, Roy (1993-10-07). "Locomotion like a wheel?". Nature. 365 (6446). Nature Publishing Group: 495. Bibcode:1993Natur.365..495F. doi:10.1038/365495a0. S2CID 41320779.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 Diamond, Jared (14 April 1983). "The biology of the wheel". Nature. 302 (5909). Macmillian Journals Ltd.: 572–573. doi:10.1038/302572a0. PMID 6835391. S2CID 4273917.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Kruszelnicki, Karl S. (1999-08-09). "Real Wheel Animals – Part Two". Great Moments in Science. ABC Science. Retrieved 2008-10-29.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 Scholtz, Gerhard (2008). "Scarab beetles at the interface of wheel invention in nature and culture?". Contributions to Zoology. 77 (3). National Museum of Natural History Naturalis: 139–148. doi:10.1163/18759866-07703001. ISSN 1875-9866. Archived from the original on 2012-01-19. Retrieved 2009-01-19.
  9. Armstrong, S. (14 July 1990). "Fog, wind and heat – life in the Namib desert". New Scientist (1725). Retrieved 2008-10-11.
  10. Myers, Simon R.; Leigh, Irene M.; Navsaria, Harshad (September 26, 2007). "Epidermal repair results from activation of follicular and epidermal progenitor keratinocytes mediated by a growth factor cascade". Wound Repair and Regeneration. 15 (5): 693–701. doi:10.1111/j.1524-475X.2007.00297.x. PMID 17971015. S2CID 1288197.
  11. Anderson KI; Wang YL; Small JV (September 1996). "Coordination of protrusion and translocation of the keratocyte involves rolling of the cell body". J. Cell Biol. 134 (5): 1209–18. doi:10.1083/jcb.134.5.1209. PMC 2120980. PMID 8794862.
  12. Pechenik, Jan A. (2005). Biology of the invertebrates. Boston: McGraw-Hill, Higher Education. pp. 178. ISBN 0-07-234899-2.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Oster G., Wang H. (March 2003). "Rotary protein motors". Trends Cell Biol. 13 (3): 114–21. doi:10.1016/S0962-8924(03)00004-7. PMID 12628343.
  14. Feniouk, Boris A. "ATP Synthase FAQ". ATP Synthase – A Splendid Molecular Machine. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
  15. Crofts, Anthony (1996). "Lecture 10: ATP Synthase". Biophysics 354: Biological Energy Conversion. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Archived from the original on 2016-09-15. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
  16. Falk, Gunnar; Walker, John E. (1988). "DNA sequence of a gene cluster coding for subunits of the F0 membrane sector of ATP synthase in Rhodospirillum rubrum. Support for modular evolution of the F1 and F0 sectors". Biochemical Journal. 254 (1): 109–122. doi:10.1042/bj2540109. PMC 1135046. PMID 2902844.
  17. Gebremichael Y.; Ayton G.S.; Voth G.A. (November 2006). "Mesoscopic Modeling of Bacterial Flagellar Microhydrodynamics". Biophys. J. 91 (10): 3640–52. Bibcode:2006BpJ....91.3640G. doi:10.1529/biophysj.106.091314. PMC 1630491. PMID 16935949.
  18. "Pre-inventing the wheel". New Scientist (2485): 97. February 5, 2005. Retrieved 2009-10-19.
  19. Atsumi T. McCarter L., Imae Y. (1992). "Polar and lateral flagellar motors of marine Vibrio are driven by different ion-motive forces". Nature. 355 (6356): 182–4. Bibcode:1992Natur.355..182A. doi:10.1038/355182a0. PMID 1309599. S2CID 4315167.
  20. Chwang, A.T.; Wu, T.Y.; Winet, H. (November 1972). "Locomotion of Spirilla". Biophysical Journal. 12 (11). Cell Press: 1549–61. Bibcode:1972BpJ....12.1549C. doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(72)86181-2. ISSN 1542-0086. PMC 1484193. PMID 4642227.
  21. Ng S.Y.; Chaban B.; Jarrell K.F. (2006). "Archaeal flagella, bacterial flagella and type IV pili: a comparison of genes and posttranslational modifications". J. Mol. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 11 (3–5): 167–91. doi:10.1159/000094053. PMID 16983194. S2CID 30386932.
  22. Mitchell, D.R. (2007). "The Evolution of Eukaryotic Cilia and Flagella as Motile and Sensory Organelles". Eukaryotic Membranes and Cytoskeleton. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology. Vol. 607. pp. 130–40. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-74021-8_11. ISBN 978-0-387-74020-1. PMC 3322410. PMID 17977465.
  23. Kimura, M. (1991). "The neutral theory of molecular evolution: a review of recent evidence". Jpn. J. Genet. 66 (4): 367–86. doi:10.1266/jjg.66.367. PMID 1954033. Archived from the original on 2008-12-11. Retrieved 2014-04-28.
  24. Otto S., Whitlock M. (1997). "The Probability of Fixation in Populations of Changing Size". Genetics. 146 (2): 723–33. doi:10.1093/genetics/146.2.723. PMC 1208011. PMID 9178020.
  25. Matzke N.J. (2003). "Evolution in (Brownian) space: a model for the origin of the bacterial flagellum". TalkOrigins.org. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
  26. Matzke N.J. (2006-09-07). "Flagellum evolution in Nature Reviews Microbiology". The Panda's Thumb. Archived from the original on 2006-09-27. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
  27. Pallen M.J., Matzke N.J. (October 2006). "From The Origin of Species to the origin of bacterial flagella". Nat. Rev. Microbiol. 4 (10): 784–90. doi:10.1038/nrmicro1493. PMID 16953248. S2CID 24057949.
  28. Gould, S.J.; Vrba, E.S. (1982). "Exaptation; a missing term in the science of form". Paleobiology. 8 (1): 4–15. doi:10.1017/S0094837300004310. S2CID 86436132.
  29. Holliday, Robin (June 2003). "Creationism and the wheel". BioEssays. 25 (6). Wiley Periodicals: 620–621. doi:10.1002/bies.10280. ISSN 1521-1878. PMID 12766952.
  30. Fish, Frank E.; Lauder, George V.; Mittal, Rajat; Techet, Alexandra H.; Triantafyllou, Michael S.; Walker, Jeffery A.; Webb, Paul W. (June 8, 2003). "Conceptual Design for the Construction of a Biorobotic AUV Based on Biological Hydrodynamics" (PDF). George Washington University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-08-20. Retrieved 2009-01-28. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 31.3 31.4 31.5 31.6 31.7 LaBarbera, Michael (March 1983). "Why the Wheels Won't Go". The American Naturalist. 121 (3). The University of Chicago Press: 395–408. doi:10.1086/284068. JSTOR 2461157. S2CID 84618349.
  32. Robert J. Full (February 2002). Robert Full on Engineering and Evolution (Conference presentation video). TED Conferences, LLC. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  33. Adams, Cecil (May 15, 1998). "Why has no animal species ever evolved wheels?". The Straight Dope. Chicago Reader. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  34. John H. Lienhard. "A Man with Wheels?". The Engines of Our Ingenuity. Episode 406. Houston. National Public Radio. KUHF-FM. A Man with Wheels?.
  35. "Tech Today: Walking Forest Machine". Space.com. Archived from the original on 2006-03-10. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
  36. Wong, Jo Yung (2008). Theory of Ground Vehicles. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-17038-0.
  37. A1 US Application 2010/0307843 A1, T.T. & Lawson, "Four Wheel Drive System", published Dec. 9, 2010 
  38. Balasubramanian, Ravi (May 2004). "Legless Locomotion: Concept and Analysis". Carnegie Mellon University: 1. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.118.7949. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  39. "Center of Gravity and Roll-Over Angle". Jeepaholics Anonymous. Archived from the original on 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
  40. Johnson, Raymond P. (June 1993). "Unstable Vehicles – Unsafe at Any Speed". Raymond Paul Johnson, a Law Corporation. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
  41. Pruett, Chris (November 2010). "The Anthropology of Fear: Learning About Japan Through Horror Games". Interface on the Internet. 10 (9). Pacific University, Oregon: Berglund Center for Internet Studies. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
  42. Brown, Fredric (1944). Arena. Astounding Stories. ISBN 1-159-66412-9. Archived from the original on April 14, 2009. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  43. Arena title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  44. Escher, Maurits Cornelis (2001). M.C. Escher, the graphic work. Germany: Taschen. pp. 14, 65. ISBN 3-8228-5864-1.
  45. "Uncle Scrooge: Land Beneath the Ground!". Inducks Database. COA. Archived from the original on 2013-11-11. Retrieved 2012-07-15.
  46. "Terries and Fermies". Inducks Database. COA. Archived from the original on 2012-07-16. Retrieved 2012-07-15.
  47. Grøsfjeld, Sigvald, Jr. "Chapter VII (1952-1959): The 1950's". The Lives and Times in Duckburg. Archived from the original on 2014-08-03. Retrieved 2012-07-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  48. Martin, George R.R. (August 2003). Tuf Voyaging. Meisha Merlin Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59222-005-2.
  49. San Juan, A. (February 3, 1998). "Stomatopod Biology: The Stomatopod and the Wheel". The Lurker's Guide to Stomatopods. Retrieved 2009-01-19.
  50. Sonic Team (June 23, 1991). Sonic the Hedgehog. Sega.
  51. Thomas, Lucas M. (January 26, 2007). "Sonic the Hedgehog VC Review". IGN. Archived from the original on February 17, 2012. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
  52. Slonczewski, Joan (1998). Microbe. Tor Science Fiction. ISBN 0-312-86716-6. {{cite book}}: |newspaper= ignored (help)
  53. Simak, Clifford D. (1968). The Goblin Reservation (PDF). New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. pp. 5, 42. ISBN 978-0-88184-897-7.
  54. Anthony, Piers (October 1977). Cluster. Avon Books. pp. 18–20, 143. ISBN 978-1-61756-013-2.[permanent dead link]
  55. Brin, David (1996). Brightness Reef. Uplift trilogy. Vol. 1. Random House. ISBN 978-0-553-57330-5.
  56. Brin, David (1996). Infinity's Shore. Uplift trilogy. Vol. 2. Easton Press. ISBN 978-1-85723-565-4.
  57. Applegate, K. A. (1997). The Andalite Chronicles. Animorphs. Scholastic Press. ISBN 978-0-590-10971-0.[permanent dead link]
  58. Stewart, Ian; Cohen, Jack (2000). Wheelers. Warner Books. ISBN 978-0-446-52560-2.
  59. "Wheelers". Kirkus Reviews. September 15, 2000. Retrieved 2011-08-16.[permanent dead link]
  60. Jungle Junction (2009– ) on IMDb