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Quicksand
How
Deadly Is Quicksand?
WRITTEN
BY: The Editors of Encyclopaedia
Britannica
It used to be a standard trope in action movies,
although you don’t see it much these days: a patch of apparently solid ground
in the jungle that, when stepped on, turns out to have the consistency of cold
oatmeal.
The unlucky victim starts sinking down into the
muck; struggling only makes it worse.
Unless there’s a vine to grab a hold of, he or
she disappears without a trace (except maybe a hat floating sadly on the
surface).
It was a bad way to go. Quicksand was probably
the number-one hazard faced by silver-screen adventurers, followed by decaying
rope bridges and giant clams that could hold a diver underwater.
Given how often quicksand deaths and near-deaths
occur in film, you would think we would be seeing news about quicksand
tragedies in real life.
But an Internet search for deaths by quicksand
won’t turn up much. Is quicksand actually as dangerous as advertised?
Nope. Quicksand — that is, sand that behaves as
a liquid because it is saturated with water — can be a mucky nuisance, but it’s
basically impossible to die in the way that is depicted in movies.
That’s because quicksand is denser than the
human body. People and animals can get stuck in it, but they don’t get sucked
down to the bottom — they float on the surface.
Our legs are pretty dense, so they may sink, but
the torso contains the lungs, and thus is buoyant enough to stay out of
trouble.
If you do find yourself stuck in quicksand, the
best idea is to lean back so that the weight of your body is distributed over a
wider area.
Moving won’t cause you to sink. In fact, slow
back-and-forth movements can actually let water into the cavity around a
trapped limb, loosening the quicksand’s hold.
Getting out will take a while, though.
Physicists have calculated that the force required to extract your foot from
quicksand at a rate of one centimeter per second is roughly equal to the force
needed to lift a medium-sized car.
One genuine danger is that a person who is
immobilized in quicksand could be engulfed and drowned by an incoming tide —
quicksands often occur in tidal areas — but even these types of accidents are
very rare.
Britannica's
editorial staff
Britannica's
editors include Adam Augustyn, Patricia Bauer, Brian Duignan, Alison
Eldridge, Erik Gregersen, Amy McKenna, Melissa
Petruzzello, John P. Rafferty, Michael Ray, Kara Rogers, Amy Tikkanen, Jeff Wallenfeldt, Adam Zeidan,
and Alicja
Zelazko.
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