Byssus
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The term byssus (sometimes byssal thread, or byssus thread) denotes strong threads secreted by mussels to attach to rocks and large, generally heavy objects in the intertidal zone. They range to 6 centimeters in length.
The term that entered English via Greek bussos, meaning linen, flax, from an ultimate Egyptian root meaning linen.
Royalty of ancient times favored textiles spun from byssal threads; they called such threads sea silk. The cloak of a Roman Centurion, the rainment of the Egyptian King Tutankhamun, and the golden fleece sought by Jason and the Argonauts have been reputed to have been spun from byssal threads.
It is of scientific interest what enables byssal threads to adhere so strongly to surfaces, for byssal threads have a powerful glue.
External links and references
General:
- A photo (http://www.miljolare.no/virtue/img/Species/pages/Byssus%20threads%20from%20mussel.php)
- Another photo (http://www.aquatext.com/images/fish%20etc/byssus.htm)
- History of Sea Byssus cloth (http://www.designboom.com/eng/education/byssus_history.html)
- How to spin a byssus cloth (http://www.designboom.com/eng/education/byssus_howto.html)
Definitions:
- Webster's defines byssus (http://www.webster-dictionary.net/definition/Byssus)
- American Heritage Dictionary defines byssus (http://www.bartleby.com/61/28/B0592800.html)
- WorldReference.com on the word byssus (http://www.wordreference.com/english/definition.asp?en=byssus)
Scientific:
- Science News on Marine Superglue (http://www.sciencenews.org/20040117/fob4.asp)
- Byssus Facts (http://www.lifesci.ucsb.edu/mcdb/labs/waite/byssus.html)de:Byssus