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Stretched to the limit.


When Monte Pierce warms up before a competition, he doesn't stretch his leg or shoulder muscles. Instead, he yanks on his gummy gummy

an old sheep that has lost all of its incisor teeth.
 earlobes. Nicknamed "Slingshot (networking, business, tool, product, protocol) Slingshot - CSK Software's real time financial server for the Internet.

Slingshot allows the delivery of real time market data across the Internet and private intranets quickly, cheaply and securely.
 Ears," Pierce holds a Guinness World Record for using his lengthy ears to launch a coin a whopping distance of 3 meters (10 feet)!

How did Pierce complete his flinging feat?

Like a rubber band, your earlobe ear·lobe or ear lobe
n.
The soft, fleshy, pendulous lower part of the external ear.
 skin is elastic. It snaps back to its original shape after being stretched. When Pierce tugs on his long lobes, the skin builds up elastic potential energy Noun 1. elastic potential energy - potential energy that is stored when a body is deformed (as in a coiled spring)
elastic energy

P.E., potential energy - the mechanical energy that a body has by virtue of its position; stored energy
 (stored energy due to being stretched). Then, he places a coin on his ear and releases the stretched earlobe. The ear's stored energy turns into kinetic energy (energy due to an object's motion), says Igor Sokolov, a physicist at Clarkson University in New York. And like a slingshot, that kinetic energy transfers to the coin on his ear, shooting it skyward sky·ward  
adv. & adj.
At or toward the sky.



skywards adv.
.

To fling it farther, he stretches his ear longer. That builds additional potential energy--which means more coin-tossing kinetic energy. For his record-breaking launch, Pierce had to stretch his earlobe to a length of nearly 12 centimeters (5 inches).

Luckily for him, he started tugging on his earlobes when he was just a child. "By constantly pulling on his earlobes, he made them longer, and also increased their elasticity [ability to snap back (Football) to roll the ball back with the foot; - done only by the center rush, who thus delivers the ball to the quarter back on his own side when both sides are ranged in line.

See also: Snap
]," says Sokolov. Now, Pierce's putty lobes permanently hang down to a length of about 2.5 cm (1 in.). Only plastic surgery could get them back to their original length, says Sokolov.

Hear this: His ears can do more than toss coins. Pierce can yank his earlobes up over his eyes. He can even roll them up, stuffing them into his ears like earplugs.
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Title Annotation:Gross Out
Author:Bryner, Jeanne
Publication:Science World
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Nov 22, 2004
Words:286
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