Really, we should envy spiders. Imagine being able to make silk like they do, flinging it around to get from place to place, always having a strong-as-steel safety line or spinning a comfy hammock ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Spider silk is thinner than hair and works in cold—scientists explain how it’s made
A single strand of spider dragline silk is roughly five times thinner than a human hair. Drop it into liquid nitrogen at negative 196 degrees Celsius, and instead of cracking apart like most synthetic ...
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