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Insect architecture

Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2008 1:48 pm
by drew
Discussion split from Screenshots. – Ahruman
Commander McLane wrote:
pagroove wrote:
It gets better and better!
Isn't that a Thargoid Hive Cube?
(As you probably also wouldn't expect for insects. Their ships are octogonal.)
Always wondered about that - shouldn't an intelligent insectoid race have a big thing about hexagons?

Cheers,

Drew.

Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2008 2:22 pm
by Disembodied
I think it's only bees and wasps that build hexagons. Even then, they have hexagonal cells for storing honey, larvae, chutney etc., but the nests themselves aren't hexagonal.

Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2008 2:34 pm
by DaddyHoggy
I presume like most (all?) things in nature - bees take the least wasteful option - since cells constructed from Hexagons do not leave any gaps or waste any material that could be better used elsewhere.

Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2008 6:09 pm
by Killer Wolf
i don't think they are actual hexagons, simply round holes placed so that the wax/paper around them gives the illusiion of hexagons?

Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2008 6:29 pm
by JensAyton
They're rounded, but basically hexagonal. Why? Because hexagons are the optimal way to build a cell structure (minimum material use for equally-sized cells) and evolution is an optimization system.

Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2008 7:10 am
by Killer Wolf
w/ all our new technology and stuff, i'd *really* like to create tiny lego bricks and see what ants could do w/ them. they can build stonking nests w/ pine needles etc, i wonder what they'd be capable of w/ decent building materials.

Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2008 8:47 am
by JensAyton
Killer Wolf wrote:
w/ all our new technology and stuff, i'd *really* like to create tiny lego bricks and see what ants could do w/ them. they can build stonking nests w/ pine needles etc, i wonder what they'd be capable of w/ decent building materials.
Not much, but if you came back after half a million years…

Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2008 8:57 am
by Griff
Killer Wolf wrote:
w/ all our new technology and stuff, i'd *really* like to create tiny lego bricks and see what ants could do w/ them. they can build stonking nests w/ pine needles etc, i wonder what they'd be capable of w/ decent building materials.
Something like this probably:
Image

Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2008 10:17 am
by drew
Ha! Classic Spectrum gaming - that was a good game!

Which emulator is that then?

Cheers,

Drew.

Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2008 11:16 am
by Griff
I just grabbed the image from a google search, the emulator seems to be this one: http://k1.dyndns.org/
A speccy emulator for Macs!
I've got a cool free one for my Windows pc at home, i can find out what it's called later on this evening if you like, i do remember that there was one you had to pay for - spectaculator i think it was called, it's not that one, i'm too much of a cheapskate

Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 7:10 am
by Killer Wolf
:-D

lordy, nostalgia.

i think ants would take less than half a million years. they're pretty clever. be interesting to watch them anyways, we've got loads outside the house, they're fascinating. bit annoying/amusing too mind - i was going about filling sand in the gaps of the block paving, and in one place an ant wandered over and started taking the sand back out! :-D

Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 8:40 am
by Commander McLane
Killer Wolf wrote:
...we've got loads outside the house, they're fascinating. bit annoying/amusing too mind - i was going about filling sand in the gaps of the block paving, and in one place an ant wandered over and started taking the sand back out! :-D
...which is why you will end up with having loads inside the house! (I do, believe me; ants of all types, colours and sizes. The good thing is, of course, that they somehow keep the cockroaches under control. The bad thing being that, if there are no cockroaches around, they turn to anything remotely edible left in the kitchen...

Hmmm, I wonder what that reminds me of? Perhaps I should try to send my kitchen for a little sun-dive... :roll: )

Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 12:47 pm
by Killer Wolf
actually, we've only ever had ONE ant inside! i think they're simply happy where they are, they've never made any excursions inside. i have noticed a distinct reduction in the number of spiders we've had in the house tho. i dunno if the ants foraging paths around and about have set up a DMZ around the house (yeah, they're all around, in the back garden too - not even had any in the garage tho, oddly) that other bugs keep away from : seen them scrapping on the path w/ other insects, they're certainly enthusiastic about defending their territory!

Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 2:16 pm
by DaddyHoggy

Posted: Thu Dec 04, 2008 7:18 am
by Killer Wolf
"by 2002 it had established what was effectively a single supercolony along thousands of kilometres of coast"

see - imagine if they'd had lego....