Click to enlarge |
So every time I see a giant I think: 'That looks convincing; I wonder whether they asked some biologist how to make a giant'. And then of course my attention is diverted away from that by someone being murdered unexpectedly in a gruesome manner; it's GoT, after all. In this series people die all the time, and with some recent story developments they might even do so more than once. Recently (series 6, episode 7) a giant stood still in one shot, together with some puny humans. His name is apparently 'Wun Weg Wun Dar Wun', in case you wonder, or 'Wun Wun' for short. I thought I should get that frame to have a closer look, after the killing would be over (temporarily, that is).
Click to enlarge |
Click to enlarge |
To find out, please read the first and second post in this blog on why body size matters. In short this is what happens if you double the length, width and height of an object or animal: its mass and hence weight will not become twice the original amount, but eight times as much. But the strength of a bone is given by its cross section, and if you only double the radius of a bone, its cross section becomes four times as large. But the bone needs to be able to support eight times the weight. This means its radius has to increase disproportionally: if the weight increases eight-fold, then the cross section needs to increase by a factor eight too. The radius needs to increase by the square root of eight, which is 2.83 times. In case you are dazzled, it boils down to this: increasing bone length by a factor of 2 means that bone radius has to increase by a factor 2.8.
Mind you, in real life that is probably not enough ('real life'?; what am I thinking here?). Muscle strength also depends on its cross section, and to keep the same relative strength means muscle cross section has to increase by a factor 2.8 as well, meaning more muscle mass. All these extra increases in bone and muscle will add mass, so the bones have to be even thicker and... You see where this is going. At some point there is no mass left for lungs, guts or brain (judging from Wun Wun's speech patterns, some savings were indeed made in the latter department). Say we use a factor 3.0 to accommodate for all that.
Click to enlarge |
Click to enlarge |
Click to enlarge |
Here it is. This is what a morphologically reasonably sound giant, twice the height of a normal man, might look like.
Click to enlarge |
Click to enlarge |
The one remaining matter is whether the giant should have his feet examined: can he stand on human-type feet or must he have elephantine feet, as shown above? If a 1.8 meter m. tall man has a mass of 80 kg, then simply doubling the height, depth and width wil ensure that the mass becomes 8 times as much (80 x 2 x 2 x 2), so 640 kg. But remember that we chose to increase the depth and width by a factor 3, not 2, so the mass becomes 80 x 2 x 3 x3, or a colossal 1440 kg. Wow. Being bipedal, one leg will have to be able to withstand all that weight. Mind you, we already have taken that into account as far as bone strength is concerned. Still, it is a lot. But Wikipedia tells me that draft horses weigh up to 1000 kg and giraffes weigh up to 1930kg, and these animals do not have elephantine feet at all. While running just one of their legs may be on the ground at a point in time, with a lot of dynamic forces acting on the bone as well. So I do not think a 1440 kg humanoid needs elephantine feet, but that does not mean he cannot have them. All this brings up the topic of whether very large bipedal animals should have elephantine feet with embedded toes, or whether they should have free toes, sticking out. I am in favour of the latter, but that is something for another post, on toes.
Unless the GoT designers tell us what Wun Wun's feet look like, we will never know. Unless... unless of course we get to see a naked giant. GoT is not afraid of nudity and there have been calls for nudity to be more equally divided among male and female cast members. Perhaps that equality should include not just sexes but species, too. So let's have a naked giant; purely for scientific reasons, obviously. Actually, just the feet would be enough, thank you so much.
Note (March 2018): I had made a mistake by stating the weight of the corrected giant as 640 kg, but that was without taking into account the additional increases in cross sectional area, as pointed out by a commenter.
Note (September 2018): you may wish to have a look at a later post asking whether it is unethical to let giants ride on mammoths...