The science of Smaug the Terrible

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Earlier this year, when the television show Game of Thrones came back on air, I wrote a blog post about how (if possible) dragons could exist. But, Game of Thrones is not the only medium where dragons dwell.

I am, of course, talking about the second Hobbit film, The Desolation of Smaug (pronounced sm-OWW-gh) which features a gigantic fire-drake with an ego to match who is known by many names: Smaug the Golden, Smaug the Impenetrable, Smaug the Magnificent, Smaug the Tremendous, Smaug the Terrible, Smaug the Stupendous, The Dragon Dread, Trāgu, Lord Smaug.

But could dragons exist? Read on and find out!

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In fantasy, dragons are practically omnipresent – good guys train them, bad guys abuse their power, they horde gold, kidnap princesses, murder thousands of people … or are simply a myth in the world’s history.

But, that is in a fantasy world – what about on Earth (or an Earth-like planet)? Could dragons exist?

According to Professor John R. Hutchinson of The Royal Veterinary College in London, UK, the discussion all comes down to size and gravity. When a land animal increases in mass, gravity quickly dominates all its activities because of the various pressures it exerts on the animal’s body (but an animal in water is a very different story, just compare an elephant – the largest animal on land – with a blue whale, the largest animal in the ocean).

Now imagine an animal the size of a dragon – one long-dead in Game of Thrones was described as possessing jaws so big that it could swallow a mammoth whole and eclipse whole towns with its shadow. For much an animal to exist, it would need large bones to support its weight and muscles to move it, not to mention huge stores of energy to move and support such a large creature.

“Inevitably, the range of extreme activities that animals can do decreases as they get larger,” says Hutchinson. “So elephants don’t jump or gallop, whereas mice do; and large flying birds don’t whiz around like hummingbirds.”

One of the most identifying characteristics of a dragon is its ability to fly, but the problem of size rears its ugly head once again. As flying animals get bigger, their wing size needs to increase just as much, if not more.

“[A dragon] would need immense wings to support its weight,” said Hutchinson. “A lot of weight is wasted in that heavy tail and hind legs as well as the bulky head, too — those don’t help the dragon fly well at all. So at best such a smallish dragon would be a clumsy flier, and would have a hard time taking off.”

“If we move to a 500, let alone a 5,000 kilogram dragon, flight basically becomes out of the question in Earth’s gravity. So, one needs to invoke magic to explain a flying dragon.”

Therefore, in a world without magic, it looks like a dragon of any size would not be able to grow to such mythic proportions as described in various fantasy stories. But, what about if dragons were built like birds?

The largest bird found today is the California condor, with an average weight of 10 kilograms, a length of just over 4 feet and a wingspan of over 10 feet having been recorded (which is two and a half times its length!).

Conservatively, let us say that a dragon weighs 50 kg, and if it follows the same construction and weight distribution as a condor, than it would clock in at just over 20 feet in length and a wingspan over 50 feet.

Large? Sure. But theoretically possible.

But bigger dragons, like those described in Game of Thrones would be more like 500 kg, which would make their length 200 feet (or about two-thirds of a football field) with a wingspan of 500 feet (or the height of a 50-storey building!)

Suffice to say, even if it could exist, the physics alone would not allow such an animal to move, much less have enough energy to fly.

While dragons would not be able to fly or reach such massive size described across the globe, what about the other impressive characteristic of a dragon – its ability to spew fire?

According to Hutchinson, dragon fans will be disappointed once again.

While some animals, such as bombardier beetles, can excrete a hazardous and incendiary-type of fluid from their bodies on rare occasions for defense, fire-breathing it is not.

“Intensely hot flame takes massive amounts of energy to produce and to be hot enough to damage flesh, it would thus cook the dragon from the inside out anyway,” he adds. “I don’t see a realistic way that a very large animal could breathe some sort of fire-like substance. Tiny animals might get away with something like that on a small scale with chemical cocktails, but a huge animal would neither be able to fuel the energy needed to breathe fire nor avoid scorching itself. Again, magic (or a good imagination) is the only option to allow for such a creature.”

With fire-breathing going up in a puff of smoke along with monstrous size and ability to fly, what are we left with to satiate our need for dragons?

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Komodo dragons and Pterosaurs.

Komodo dragons are the largest living reptile on the planet, growing up to 10 feet and 150 kilograms, able to run up to 20 kilometres per hour and dive up to 15 feet. While not able to breathe fire, Komodo dragons do have a bad bite, filled with dangerous bacteria and venom – which they use to incapacitate and even kill prey with a single bite.

Pterosaurs, on the other hand, were flying dinosaurs existing millions of years ago. Hutchinson says that they could weigh 50 to 250 kilograms, have wingspans up to 36 feet and when standing, could be up to 18 feet (thanks to Brian Switek, paleontological guru for help with those numbers). Sadly, as with all dinosaurs, they have long since gone from this world.

“We have had large sort-of-dragon-like animals in the past in the form of pterosaurs or even sort-of-giant eagles and vultures, but a real dragon in the sense of classic or modern fantasy just ain’t going to ever happen.”

Sadly, science tells us that dragons are merely a fantasy, but it doesn’t stop millions of people loving them. Just because dragons are an impossible flight of fancy on Earth, in the lands of Westeros and Middle Earth, anything is possible.

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Comments (2)

  1. TrueCelt

    Come on. Really? You’re going to damn the notion of dragons based on what? Supposition of weights based on YOUR observations, nothing more.

    Alright let’s open it up. Firstly, density of skin. We have absolutely no way of knowing the inner complexity of a dragon. While a bird, a highly evolved creature, has hollow bones, what if dragons literally have air pockets in their flesh filled through pores in their skin that allow it to achieve greater manoeuvrability and lighter weight? It’s also possible their bones are made of something ULTRA light, and their skeletons are less about repelling blunt trauma, more absorbing and re-distributing throughout the frame. If they weigh virtually nothing, they DEFINITELY can glide, if not fly, and if we’re talking musculature, look at ants. Can a dragon generate energy sufficient to power an ultra lightweight, aerodynamic frame? There’s no reason their twitch reaction and overall musculature can’t compensate and offer that possibility.

    Finally. Breathing fire and fire retardant skin. Why does it need to be natural fire? Chemical fire is ABSOLUTELY credible. Equally gas. So chemical fire, a chemical burning agent. Mix 2 elements and propel with the dragon’s breath. Easy. Also if they had a natural gas pocket in their throat with a natural flap/release and a sparking agent in the mouth, the teeth for instance, then they could breathe fire easily too.

    As for fire retardant skin. If it’s chemicals, being mixed and gouted and coughed forth, well simple enough, their pores can exude a neutralising agent. I mean really this is quite simple.

    So yes. Dragons. 100% possible. Talk to an over-thinking creative with a modicum of scientific understanding rather than a highly accomplished scientist. You need creativity to understand potential.

  2. realisticly

    Could there be a possibility that, using an incredible amount of heated (not ignited) gas and fluids, the dragon could possess a network of muscles powered pneumatically (thus making them 5-10 times as powerful for their size, and 1/25 the weight)? Also, almost 50% of the energy required for flight by birds is done at take off and landing, which requires a large amount of flapping to be done, this number possibly lessened by the use of extremely powerful hind legs (as well as a springy used tail, if possible), used to launch the dragon high enough into the air to take flight without even using the wings. Also, there could be a possibility (highly likely) that the dragon has more or less of an exoskeleton rather than internal weight, through a network of scales and bones, allowing it to be much lighter, and contain large amounts of fiery energy inside of it. Also, if a large enough food source was provided (we must assume such in a world where dragons exist), the dragon may be omnivourous, devouring large amounts of highly nutricious and chemically powerful plants and fungi, which in turn could be metabolized to produce massive amounts of highly reactive gasses (assuming such gasses would not be toxic to the dragon’s internal system) heated to a level they could carry out the functions of muscles (through pneumatical function) as well as many organs? This solves the problem of the dragon’s density, as well as it’s metabolized function (since the entire dragon’s system and organs practically exist off of powerful gasses and chemicals devoured in large amounts of plants, tinder, charcoal and even a small amount of living flesh) and it also allows for an easy system of flight, in which the dragon need not fly, so much as make it high enough into the air to where it can glide with it’s wings outward and contorting the body and wings in a similar function to a flying serpent, requiring little energy and even less flapping and metabolism usage. Also, we must keep in mind that unlike birds, dragons are considered cold-blooded, and the metabolism and fire breathing process alone, through the use of the stated chemicals and gasses, allows it to heat itself, digest, move, cycle internal fluids and even evacuate waste. Therefor, a dragon could reach an incredibly massive size, under the condition that it had a constant supply of mosses, plants, fungis, trees and animals to sustain it, which, in the given fantasy world, is quite likely given the speed inwhich this possible species of moss could grow, especially when aided with magic (let us not forget that magic alone allows the dragon to fly)