Difficulty questions: Are fire sprays too familiar but are their teeth still missing?
Going to find the answer to the question when spraying fire, did the dragon's "kit" burn down? Make sure you are extremely surprised!
The dragon is probably the most illusory or the greatest creature that people imagine. From Asia to Europe, there are dragon appearances in popular culture. Dragons in Eastern culture are water dragons, and the West is fire dragons.
The fire dragon is cool to say, see how the Dragon Mother Drogon destroyed Jamie Lannister's army in the blink of an eye, or the dragon Smaug submerged the town of Lake in the flames of fire, it was not the first to return if in terms of the level of destruction!
Fire dragon in Western culture.
But the question today is: Is the dragon spraying fire through the mouth, is it okay for their teeth?
Most hypotheses reject the notion that dragons spit fire through the lungs and throat, because there are no sacred creatures that can store fire in the abdomen. Instead, dragons were supposed to spit out flammable air, then flared up with sparks formed between their teeth.
A specific hypothesis is that when spraying fire, dragons will hold their breath. The methane gas from the gastrointestinal tract, combined with the enzyme action between two teeth, will catch fire and burn when sprayed out.
Dragons are thought to spit out flammable air, then flare up with sparks formed between their teeth.
No matter how much the dragon sprayed fire, their teeth must be exposed to that fire. And this is the problem.
I just assume the fire dragon's teeth will go away, but everything has a limit of tolerance. Like ancient microorganisms, it can withstand hydrothermal currents up to 110 degrees Celsius. Wood burns at about 260 degrees Celsius, while burning methane gas emits heat around 1,949 degrees Celsius.
With such a frighteningly high heat, could its teeth remain intact after intense flames?
With such a terrifying high temperature, is its teeth intact?
For example, human teeth, when exposed to fire, will crack and break in the range of 200-400 degrees Celsius. To 1,100 degrees Celsius, the roots will crumble and the crowns will melt into ash. So, even if the dragon teeth were assumed to be harder, it would be difficult for it to withstand such a tremendous amount of heat.
But there is one small thing like this: For most vertebrates, the adult's teeth do not last for a lifetime. Man is a species of diphyodonts, meaning there are two consecutive teeth. Other organisms, like sharks, are polyphyodonts, meaning that the species has teeth that fall out and regrow continuously.
So perhaps we should consider the possibility of dragons being a genuine polyphyodonts . When old teeth fall under the heat of fire, new teeth will grow back where the tooth has just fallen.
Sounds pretty reasonable, right? Who knows, when spraying fire, it sprayed even a few broken pieces of teeth and just increased the destructive ability!
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