The animal you're describing is likely a snail. Snails have a soft, gelatinous body and a muscular foot that helps them glide along surfaces. Their spiral shell, often adorned with various splotches or patterns, serves as protection and a means of moisture retention. This combination of features is characteristic of many terrestrial and aquatic snail species.
snail but its ody its slimey a tortoise
Spiral horned antelope.
The spiral shelled mollusk that many people know these days are the snail it is a spiral shell to protect this animal from its prey.
Usually Tinfoil does spiral, but I only found this with the cheaper brands.
Yes as it does around a screw
There are quite a few animals that build a spiral chamber. One of these many famous animals is the sea snail.
A worm. Long, white and normally curled up in a spiral.
All galaxies have a dense core of stars. Spiral galaxies, however, have arms that are often visible. There are two kinds of spiral galaxies: barred, where there appears to be a line running from arm to arm through the core, and ordinary, where there is no bar.
So you can tell if the motor is turning (running) just by looking.
The scimitar oryx is a species of Oryx in Tunisia. It is a spiral-horned antelope.
Hubble devised subcategorization for spiral galaxies first based on whether the galaxy exhibited a bar and then how well the spiral arms were defined. The classes are designated as Sa, Sb, and SC with the Sa class being the most tightly wound. A capital B designation after the S indicates the presence of a bar as well.
The Nautilus belongs to the kingdom Animalia. It is a marine mollusk with a spiral-shaped shell.