But you do see my point right.
That if physics can apply to other superheroes like superman when he does something, or hulk, or spiderman, why shouldn't it apply to wolverine in regard to him being able to do major damage with just a punch.
According to physics he should, and about his skelton wieght, if you didn't weight that much to begin with, then you had admantium added to your weight, that only added 100 pounds(evenly disstributed), the wieght being distributed throughout your body would make it as though it only weighed 25-50 pounds more rather than 100 lbs.
Then add to that the fact that the human body heals stronger than brfore, if only slightly(it scientifically documented/experimented/proven),
Then add to that that logan is a mutant, one with healing several hundredx that of a normal human, then he has inhanced reflexes and peakhuman strength= the(evenly distributed) weight of his skeleton shouldn't even slow him down as much as having a 50 lbs weight vest on would slow batman down.
If it did slow him down(it probably doesn't), given how fast he is, that means he'd be faster without it.
Point is, that the added weight of his adamantium skeleton would be like almost no added weight to him at all.
How else do you explain how he moves, his body is adjusted to it hundreds of times over, probably thousands(gievn the healing factor).
If you can't except this because you just don't like him then I'm sorry, but if you think about it, it makes as much sense as superman being superfast/superstrong/super everything cause he is "super".
"Super"-man is super, afterall.
So you read my post til you get what I'm trying to say about wolverine.
(Oh and many of the laws of science,physics,distribution,and gravity do apply to many of the aspects of comics. the basic ones. This is just overlooked many times by some of the stupid ones that don't like a building not caving in under its own weight when lifted by someone superstrong. Most others do apply though, its hit and miss if you can catch them. The one about logan should though.)
the last person i can think of who lifted a building was gladiator, and considering he's got some psionic aspect to his powers, it could work in a way similar to superboy's (telekinetically supporting the object he lifts.)
anyway, i totally dont get how what you said was meant to prove that wolverine hits harder than spider-man lifts. some of it makes sense, though the human body will only grow stronger if supplied with the proper nutrients, not just naturally, but it still doesn't disprove the physics you boasted about at the beginning.
and, again, he doesn't have peak-human strength.