A shearing force will produce a fracture parallel to the direction of the applied force. Bone is weakest under shear stress making fractures common even with a minimal trauma. The following image is an example of shear forces on bone.
Just tried to post an image n I was, repoint Ed to a privacy warning. 😑
See shear graphics incase I git the jail.
Just tried to post an image n I was, repoint Ed to a privacy warning. 😑
See shear graphics incase I git the jail.
The gist is, going from my recollection, it is a shear force combined with my Engineering nuance , under the skin, which has allowed OB and Magnum foramen to separate.
I'll need to see if I can find a decent image, biologically minded.
I'm thinking the force required to split the bone seam is the force I have to manifest fae CF(centrifugal force).
TYPED..since you've no got a scoob about the meaty engineering, this is dubious wasted time.
The ideas there.
@KeithCa41469726
I'm thinking the force required to split the bone seam is the force I have to manifest fae CF(centrifugal force).
TYPED..since you've no got a scoob about the meaty engineering, this is dubious wasted time.
The ideas there.
@KeithCa41469726
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