RE: Curating the Internet: Science and technology digest for December 11, 2019
I find the exoskeleton very interesting, as I suspect most of us do. As a kid of 17 I had a job at a seafood processor in Alaska. Halibut come in a range of sizes, are beheaded, the guts scooped out, and then are slid into a shallow pool of water on a specially designed steel tabled surrounded by women with blunt knives - the slime table.
Like slugs, halibut produce copious slime, which the women scraped off with the blades. When they were done, the halibut were transferred to freezer racks, and this is where I came in. My job was to move the 200+ lb. halibut from the pool on the waist high table onto racks ~30 feet away, which were then moved by forklift into blast freezers.
There are only two things you can grab on a headless halibut: the narrowest part of the tail, which on a large halibut is too large to grasp with your hand, but can be cradled in the crook of your arm, and reaching down inside the gut cavity is a small bone that can be pinched between thumb and forefinger, and that enables the weight of the fish to rest on your forearm rather than sliding off if you pinch firmly enough.
This was a difficult job, because halibut can weigh a great deal more than 200 lbs. Twice that without exaggeration. The exoskeleton could not do it, because it cannot be used to rest weight on your forearm, nor has a gripper that could pinch the bone at the base of the halibut's empty gut cavity. Resolving those lacks is not as simple as it sounds, as halibut are a premium product that need to be handled very gently to prevent damaging the meat.
I am reminded of The Ballad of John Henry.
Thanks!
I agree. The exosuit is very interesting. It looks like it would be fun to try, but probably only usable in rigidly controlled situations at first. Since it's limited to 200 pounds, it sounds like it wouldn't be suited for halibut, even if it weren't for the handling challenges.
That's also interesting about the slime. I had no idea that halibut produced slime like that.
Imagine a 300 lb. headless, flat slug. Grab it and stagger over to the freezer racks, to slide it onto a tray. Then imagine stumbling, and dropping the limp, slimy, tapered corpse onto the wet concrete floor. Then envision trying to somehow peel it off the floor, flopping, limp, slippery and slimy, ~six feet long, a foot thick, and a yard wide, weighing 300 lb.s, and stuck to the floor by suction.
That job sucked LOL.