Toronto Star

IRRESISTIB­LE APPEAL

Science has an answer for why bananas give us the slip,

- CODY CASSIDY AND PAUL DOHERTY

If you see a banana peel on the floor, how concerned should you be? If the cartoons are to be believed, the answer is, of course, very. Cartoons might understate banana peel danger by overstatin­g the strength of your skull, but the cartoons aren’t kidding about the slipperine­ss of banana peels. Rigorous scientific study has confirmed bananas as the most dangerous of all fruit peels.

Slipperine­ss is measured by placing a block of a given material on a ramp of another material and then slowly increasing the angle of the ramp. The tangent of the angle of the ramp when the object starts to slide gives the coefficien­t of friction (CoF), and it usually scales from 0 (the slipperies­t) to 1 (stickiest), though in some stickier situations it can go as high as 4. Rubber on a cement sidewalk has a near slip-proof CoF of 1.04.

Then there’s the other end of the spectrum. Sliding on socks across a wooden floor has a CoF of only 0.23, and ice is even slipperier. A walk across an ice rink can have embarrassi­ng consequenc­es because rubber on ice registers a potentiall­y painful CoF of 0.15. Banana peels put all that to shame. We know this thanks to a few daring professors at Kitasato University in Minato, Japan, who decided to double-check the cartoons. Dr. Kiyoshi Mabuchi and his team peeled a bunch of bananas, threw them on a wooden floor, and stepped on them with rubber-soled shoes. (Hopefully they had a spotter.) Then they measured the forces involved.

It turns out Elmer Fudd might not have been as clumsy as we all thought.

Banana peels on wood have a CoF of only 0.07 — twice as slippery as ice and five times slipperier than wood. Mabuchi and his team of researcher­s weren’t done, though. Was the banana peel slippery merely because of its water content? Would other fruit peels result in similar slippage?

To find out they peeled apples and tangerines and ran the same rigorous experiment: they stepped on them. The apple peel came in a distant second, at 0.1, and the tangerine peel was by far the stickiest, with a CoF of 0.225 (about the same as stepping on a wooden floor without a peel). So if you’re walking through a fruit factory and have a choice of peels to step on, remember this: it’s not just a joke; banana peels are the worst. Under pressure, a banana peel oozes a gel that turns out to be extremely slippery. Your foot and body weight provide the pressure. The gel provides the humour.

Why is slipperine­ss so important? Walking is really just a series of falls and catches. With each step you fall forward, and with the next one you catch yourself and begin the process over again. Banana peels mess up the catching part.

If you just stand on a slippery surface, you will probably be OK. But if you take a step, you initiate a fall. To stop it, your leading foot hits the ground with forward momentum at a strike angle of 15 degrees. If you know you’re walking on a slippery substance, you will change your gait to decrease that angle, demand less friction from the floor, and lessen your chances of taking a tumble. Stray banana peels have a way of sneaking up on you, though, and research suggests that taking a normal step on a substance with a CoF of less than 0.1 results in a fall 90 per cent of the time.

Of course, the real danger with falling is injuring your brain, an essential organ that lives high off the ground. Learning to walk upright sometime four to six million years ago was a big advancemen­t for the human species, but it did introduce the problem of a slip-and-fall. If you were, say, the height of a small dog and you fell, your head would not build up enough speed to do any damage when it hit the sidewalk. You could dance on banana peels, because the difference between falling 30 centimetre­s and hitting your head and falling nearly two metres on the same organ is the difference between a bruise and a broken skull.

The force generated by an unrestrain­ed falling adult onto something solid is more than enough to crack a skull. In ballpark terms (everyone’s head is a little different) your skull would crack with as little as an unrestrain­ed one-metre fall onto a hard surface. The skull is stronger in the front and back, and weaker on the sides, but even if you fall onto the stronger frontal bone, a fall of nearly two metres is enough to crack it — especially if you pitch forward.

Either way, if you cannot protect your head from a fall of nearly two metres, your skull would fracture. Fractures are dangerous for a few reasons, but bleeding is the big one. Your brain is a blood hog, which means cracking it results in a lot of bleeding inside, putting you in immediate and deep trouble.

Bleeding inside your skull can be far more dangerous than bleeding anywhere else. And it’s not just because you can bandage a leg wound and you can’t an internal skull bleed. It’s because your skull is a solid container carrying fragile cargo. If your head starts filling with blood, your brain gets squeezed. Too much blood within your skull creates pressure that strangles the rest of your brain and chokes off and kills critical brain functions, like rememberin­g to breathe.

Of course your brain knows how fragile it is, and if you slip, it works very hard to put something in the way to break your fall — hands, elbows, knees — anything but itself. Which is why you see more bruised butts than broken heads and why banana peels are usually funny, not lethal. But “usually” isn’t the same as “always.” And that brings us to Mr. Bobby Leach, the English daredevil of Niagara Falls.

Since 1901, roughly 15 people have attempted to go over Niagara Falls for the fame or the thrill. Five of them drowned; most never went back. (“I’d rather stand in front of a cannon and be blown to death,” responded the first survivor, “than do that again.”)

But Bobby Leach was a profession­al stuntman, daredevil and circus performer who cheated death for a living. In 1911, he climbed into a steel barrel and went over the falls. He survived, although he needed six months of hospitaliz­ation to recover from two wrecked knees and a broken jaw.

Afterward, he went on to a successful lecturing career, touring the world with his barrel and posing for photos. In 1926, he was in New Zealand when he slipped on an unidentifi­ed fruit peel on a sidewalk in Auckland and gashed his leg. A few days later, Bobby Leach died from the complicati­ons. Excerpted from And Then You’re Dead: What Really Happens If You Get Swallowed by a Whale, Are Shot from a Cannon, or Go Barreling over Niagara. Copyright © 2017 by Cody Cassidy and Paul Doherty. Published by Penguin Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. Reproduced by arrangemen­t with the Publisher. All rights reserved.

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 ?? SIMON HAYTER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Banana peels, which ooze gel when stepped on, are twice as slippery as ice.
SIMON HAYTER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Banana peels, which ooze gel when stepped on, are twice as slippery as ice.
 ??  ?? Daredevil Bobby Leach died after slipping on an unidentifi­ed fruit peel.
Daredevil Bobby Leach died after slipping on an unidentifi­ed fruit peel.
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