Granular media near jamming exhibit fascinating properties, which can be
harnessed to create jammed-granulate metamaterials: materials whose
characteristics arise not only from the shape and material properties of the
particles at the microscale, but also from the geometric features of the
packing. For the case of a bending beam made from jammed-granulate
metamaterial, we study the impact of the particles' properties on the
metamaterial's macroscopic mechanical characteristics. We find that the
metamaterial's stiffness emerges from its volume fraction, in turn originating
from its creation protocol; its ultimate strength corresponds to yielding of
the force network. In contrast to many traditional materials, we find that
macroscopic deformation occurs mostly through affine motion within the packing,
aided by stress relieve through local plastic events, surprisingly
homogeneously spread and persistent throughout bending