part of the animal, and organ meats, such innards as the liver, kidneys, intestine, and so on The Essence of the Animal: Mobility from Muscle What is it that makes a creature an animal? The word comes from an Indo-European root meaning “to breathe,” to move air in and out of the body The definitive characteristic of animals is the power to move the body and nearby parts of the world Most of our meats are muscles, the propulsive machinery that moves an animal across a meadow, or through the sky or sea The job of any muscle is to shorten itself, or contract, when it receives the appropriate signal from the nervous system A muscle is made up of long, thin cells, the muscle fibers, each of which is filled with two kinds of specialized, contractile protein filaments intertwined with each other This packing of protein filaments is what makes meat such a rich nutritional source of protein An electrical impulse from the nerve associated with the muscle causes the protein filaments to slide past each other, and then lock together by means of cross-bridging, or forming bonds with each other The change in relative position of the filaments shortens the muscle cell as a whole, and the cross bridges maintain the contraction by holding the filaments in place Portable Energy: Fat Like any machine, the muscle protein machine requires energy to run Almost as important to animals as their propulsive machinery is an energy supply compact enough that it doesn’t weigh them down and impede their movement It turns out that fat packs twice as many calories into a given weight as carbohydrates do This is why mobile animals store up energy almost exclusively in fat, and unlike stationary ... by means of cross-bridging, or forming bonds with each other The change in relative position of the filaments shortens the muscle cell as a whole, and the cross bridges maintain the contraction by holding the filaments in... rich nutritional source of protein An electrical impulse from the nerve associated with the muscle causes the protein filaments to slide past each other, and then lock together by means of cross-bridging, or forming bonds... machine, the muscle protein machine requires energy to run Almost as important to animals as their propulsive machinery is an energy supply compact enough that it doesn’t weigh them down and impede their movement