Chewing is largely an adaptation for
mammalian
herbivory to help break down food faster.
Carnivores generally chew very little or swallow their food whole or in chunks. This act of gulping without chewing has inspired the English
idiom "wolfing it down". Other animals such as cows chew their food for long periods to allow for proper digestion in a process known as rumination. Rumination in cows has been shown by researchers to intensify during the night. They concluded that cows chewed more intently in the night time compared to the morning.
Ornithopods, a group of
dinosaurs including the
Hadrosaurids ("duck-bills"), developed teeth analogous to mammalian
molars and
incisors during the
Cretaceous period; this advanced, cow-like dentition allowed the creatures to obtain more nutrients from the tough plant life. This may have given them the advantage needed to compete with the formidable
sauropods, who depended on their massive gastrointestinal tracts to digest food without grinding it. ==In machinery==