It’s clear that one simply can’t know everything there is to know about, but that never stopped a curious mind from learning. Luckily, in the age of the internet, it has never been easier; with just a few clicks you can reach information about anything and everything that interests you.
You can also start a discussion with fellow netizens in a matter of a couple of clicks, too, and that’s exactly what the redditor u/Jdavies44 did. They were curious to learn about interesting facts few people knew about so they asked fellow redditors to share them, and they discussed some rather fascinating things. If you’re curious to read about them, too, wait no longer and scroll down to find their answers on the list below.
Below you will also find our interview with a behavioral expert, author of Cracking the Curiosity Code, Dr. Diane Hamilton, who was kind enough to answer a few of Bored Panda’s questions about how fun facts, curiosity, and learning intertwine.
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You can actually use the turn signal on your car to warn other drivers that you're turning or changing lanes.
I agree, and not many people know that turning the signal does not give you the right of way to be in front of someone if they do not let you.
Load More Replies...Turn signals are subscription options on Audi and BMW.
Load More Replies...Not just other drivers! Also show pedestrians and cyclists what your intentions are!
Uh...if you're driving and you don't know this, you shouldn't be driving.
It's sarcasm. People do know that, but too many of them still don't use their turn signals.
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In mid-2000s Kagoshima, Japan, an alarming rise in power blackouts was traced back to crows who were building their nests on top of electric poles. The power company formed a “Crow Patrol” in order to seek and destroy the crows’ nests. The crows responsed by building thousands of dummy nests as decoys.
The war is ongoing.
Well, I guess we all know who is going to win this war, don't mess with crows
Us aussies tried launching a millitary campaign against emu's around the time of WW1 and lost. We were the first army in the pacific to halt the advance of the japenease empire in WW2 and yet just a few decades earlier we were defeated by birds. DO NOT underestimate the birds...
Load More Replies...As an Australian, we are required to give the Japanese some advice Screenshot...da-png.jpg
Came back to this post to say that this is the funniest thing I’ve seen all day. I was laughing to myself half the morning about this. Why this isn’t part of the modern history curriculum in Australia I will never understand
Load More Replies...Australia has a poor record when it comes to bird wars.
Don't even ask China how the war on sparrows ended for them... (Several million people died due to a famine as result)
Load More Replies...Solution: build dummy power poles. Spike the top of the real power poles.
There!s an even simpler answer: Put a small platform above the top of the pole, so that the birds can build a nest without coming into contact with the wires.
Load More Replies...If a group of crows band together against you, there's a murder in your future.
If history taught us one thing then it is that you can't win a war against birds
They use tools, reward behavior in other creatures, can easily solve puzzles that require cooperation, and can even count out loud. Crows are brilliant.
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Not mind-blowing but worth sharing: There are more libraries in the US than there are Starbucks.
There are. Looked it up. 15,873 Starbucks v 9,057 public libraries.
Load More Replies...It seems like more people could do with going to the library than going to Starbucks there, though. Support your local library!
My city has a library, but no Starbucks. Something I can be proud of.
Load More Replies...Probably a fairly universal statistic. NZ has 332 public libraries and 37 Starbucks.
It doesn't specify public, so I wonder if we are counting all of the University libraries too?
Load More Replies...Too bad it seems people aren't utilizing them. Starbucks probably gets more visitors.
Seeking to delve deeper into how curiosity correlates with learning, Bored Panda got in touch with Dr. Diane Hamilton, who pointed out that such a link is found not only in humans.
“Curiosity, a fundamental aspect of learning and knowledge, is not exclusive to humans,” she said in a recent interview. “The Max Planck Institute introduced the term ‘curiosity gene’ based on researching a songbird. Imagine a bird that lacks curiosity. It may fly around a bush, searching for berries, but if it doesn't venture to explore other bushes, it will perish once the berries are depleted. Curiosity not only facilitates learning and knowledge, but also triggers a sense of reward in our brains, thanks to the release of dopamine.”
The weirdest animal in the world is the jellyfish called the Portuguese Man ‘o War (also called a bluebottle in Australia).
It gives birth via a process called “budding”, where a new animal just sort of pops off a random place on the jelly. But it doesn’t give birth to whole other jellyfish. It gives birth to many different types of animal-like creatures called “zooids”. They live on the bottom of the jelly, live independently from each other, but can’t survive without the others.
For instance, there’s a zooid that can digest fish, but can’t catch them. There’s a tentacle zooid that can catch fish, but can’t digest them. There are also several other zooids like that. Scientists have been scratching their heads about how to classify this creature, and are calling it a colony rather than an animal.
And that leads to an interesting question. What is the organism? Is it the zooid, because it moves around independently, but can’t really survive very long on its own? Or is it the whole jellyfish, in which case the zooids are a bit like organs, except for the fact that they might go for a walk occasionally?
And if you say that the whole jellyfish is the organism, maybe bees aren’t an organism either, but a beehive is?
That’s the problem with classification systems. As soon as you make one, along comes some weird example that makes you have to start again.
This probably doesn't count as an incredible fact that people don't know, but is a whole more relevant if you are at the beach: DON'T TOUCH THEM! We had this drilled into us as kids. The sting isn't usually deadly but it is extremely painful and can make you very unwell.
Even dead on the beach their tentacles(?) can leave a nasty sting, no touch! Also when you see them floating on the surface get away! I was snorkeling and looked up to see a small one (looks like a bag floating in the water) and it's body hit the side of my hand and it's tentacles got me across my stomach. It HURTS!
Load More Replies...It's actually not a jellyfish, though. It's called a Siphonophore
Otters have pouches in their sides they keep their favourite rocks in for smashing open clams. It's not just simians that use tools.
Even otters have pockets. Not us women, tho! Where are we supposed to keep our clam smashing rocks? In our bra? 😉
Well, they used to be known as over the shoulder boulder holders, so yes, I guess.
Load More Replies...Not all otters. This is speifically about sea otters. That picture (at time of posting) is definitely not a sea otter.
"No, not that one.. That's the wrench... Hold on it's in here somewhere..."
Load More Replies...Crows, ravens and other birds are known to use rocks as tools too. The thing that makes humans special is we actually shape and craft our tools instead of using whatever is at hand. Homo Erectus was making hand axes and Homo Habilis was using actual bows a million years ago.
Crows can seemingly make tools out of multiple components: https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2018-10-24-new-caledonian-crows-can-create-tools-multiple-parts#:~:text=The%20New%20Caledonian%20crows%20(Corvus,by%20bending%20a%20pliable%20material.
Load More Replies...The author of Cracking the Curiosity Code noted that we’re not equally curious throughout our entire lives. “We are born with high levels of curiosity that peak around five and then diminish dramatically as we grow older,” she told Bored Panda.
“That same peak and drop happens to creativity as well. In his incredible TED talk about whether schools kill creativity, Sir Ken Robinson acknowledged that we have created an educational system that educates people out of their competencies. To fulfill 19th-century industrial job requirements, we created a hierarchy in education where math and science were at the top, and creative thinking was at the bottom. As education rewarded top-tiered skills like math and science more often, the system became about creating more academics, which in turn undervalued undergraduate degrees. This then caused more and more top-tiered skilled degrees to be made. Not surprisingly, such a system has harmed curiosity and creativity, which are fundamental for innovation.”
Lake Superior. on that lake is an island called Isle Royale. on that island is a lake. on that lake is an island. on that island is a pond, and on that pond is boulder. that boulder is the largest island on the largest pond on the largest island on the largest lake on the largest island on the largest lake in the world (by surface area).
Sounds like the story: "In the dark, dark, wood, there's a dark, dark house. And in the dark, dark house...."
The lake, it is said, never gives up her dead. When the skies of November turn gloomy.
🎶🎵🎵🎵🎶 There's a hole in the bottom of the sea. There's a hole in the bottom of the sea. There's a hole. There's a hole. There's a hole in the bottom of the sea. 🎵🎶🎶🎶🎶🎵 Sing along with me! https://youtu.be/UK6UNRnbfnw
Pretty much the exact same comment as the last one! 😎 Thank u last smoke of the day followed by mind blowing facts!
Switzerland, the country of neutrality, has unintentionally invaded its neighbor Liechtenstein 3-5 times…1968-2007.
3/4 times Liechtenstein didn’t know of it until Switzerland apologized.
The 1/4 was that one time Switzerland fired a missile and caused a forest fire, reparations were paid.
After one incident, the Liechtensteiners reportedly offered drinks to the Swiss soldiers.
A Liechtenstein spokesman said, "It's not like they invaded with attack helicopters".
"Invaded". Liechtenstein is really small. You can walk through it is an hour. The invasion was a soldier accidentally walking there or something.
those 3/4 times were just Swiss soldiers on an exercise that just wandered through the forest into Liechtenstein.
Load More Replies...Better yet, the canadian/dutch wiskey war over some tiny frozen island; they literally just moved each others flags every so often and left a bottle of wiskey each time for the "enemy"
Load More Replies...Liechtenstein sent about a hundred soldiers off to the Napoleonic War. They came back with one more soldier than they set out with.
The last time Liechtenstein went to war , with Austria, they sent 80 soldiers out and came back with an extra. Apparently an Austrian friend decided to come and join them
We accidentally invaded Spain once (UK). It happens lol. https://www.forces.net/news/time-uk-accidentally-invaded-spain
The Liechtenstein spokesman doesn't even care at this point.
Oh, like how british marines accidentally invaded Spain while trying to land at Gibraltar in 2002. To quote the mayor of La Linea (the town at the beach) "They landed on our coast to confront a supposed enemy with typical Commando tactics. But we managed to hold them on the beach."
liechtenstein- the country that was the inspiration for the great late peter sellers' movie, "the mouse that roared". fun cold war comedy!
The inspiration was actually the novel "The Mouse That Roared". There are 4 other novels about the Grand Duchy of Fenwick, one prequel, 3 sequels.
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The Amazon River is over 4,000 miles long and doesn't have any bridges that cross it.
So 6500 km... That's the distance between Paris and New Delhi. Quite amazing.
Length is one thing, but check how wide it is! 4-5 kilometers during "dry" times, up to 50 km (yes, 50 is not a typo) during rainy times. How do you want to build a bridge over this? Bridge that can cover 5 to 50 kilometers... Some pontoons? The drag would be crazy.
Load More Replies...But, there is means to cross it. Ferries of various kinds. This depends on a whole set of factors ... a bridge is more expensive, in construction as in maintainance, the longer it is. Building and keeping operationable costs the same for every meter, not for every bridge. Therefore, a long bridge will only make more sense than a ferry service, if it is, for long enough time, by enough verhicles, pedestrians and so forth, crossed. Now, the second factor that majorly impacts this, at least in parts of the river, that its actual location isn't constant, but constantly changing, shifting, drying up, being washed out, ... any structure spanning over the river must either vastly exceed it, cover the whole bed, or won't last long there. Ferries are more feasible here, or just not going there, often, would be preferable.
During the dry season, the width of the Amazon River can be 4 km to 5 km in places – and in the wet season, this can increase to 50 km....with a difference like that, it's easy to imagine bridge engineers throwing up their hands with a giant resounding NOPE.
Probably because there isn't much need to get to the other side, in most cases. (Yes, I've been on the Amazon.)
There are so many amazing facts about the Amazon River! When I went there I felt like I was on a new planet. It's unreal.
“To better understand this impact, look at its effect on children,” Dr. Hamilton continued. “As part of his work with NASA, Professor George Land created an assessment to test for creativity and studied children to view how their levels changed. He found that 98% of children were creative geniuses at age five. By age ten, that number fell to 30%. By age 15, that figure dropped to 12%; by age 31, only 2% were creative geniuses.
“Curiosity is important throughout all stages of our existence. Unfortunately, when our levels drop in adulthood, that can limit us and lead us into jobs we don't love or choices that feel safe rather than rewarding.”
Squirrels can’t find 80% of the nuts they hide.
Among other things. They have very sweetly planted a couple of bearded irises and a few tiger lillys at the end of my driveway.
Load More Replies...I have to disagree. Seen a PBS program about squirels. They proved that squirrels actually 90 to 95 percent of the time know where they hide there nuts.
The earliest known public museum dates to circa 530 BCE and it had archeological Mesopotamian artifacts on display.
I can only imagine what kind of fossil and artifact museums we would have nowadays if we had truly realized their worth back then. So many things destroyed in history..
Especially due to looting and wars. Museums should be off limits.
Load More Replies...They actually had archeologists in 530 BC. Western history starts at 1AD but there's a ton of history that happened earlier. Enough that BCE archeologist was a legit occupation.
Western history starts at 1AD? What do you mean by this? Lots of Western countries have history stretching back far beyond this.
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In Turkey (the country) turkey meat is called "Hindi" (India).
And in Denmark we call "danish" (the pastry) for "wienerbrød" (bread fom Vienna 😉
And in Berlin, a "Berliner" (effectively a hole-less Donut filled with jam), is not called that, but "Pfannkuchen" (pancake), while in other regions it's called "Krapfen", "Kräppel" or "Puffel". So JFK did not call himself "a donut" when he visited Berlin and said to its people "Ich bin ein Berliner", who excitedly cheered instead of laughing at him, as is sometimes falsely claimed.
Load More Replies...Oh my god, as a Canadian who learned French all throughout school….I never made that connection, how interesting! Edit: just googled more, Turkey is North American but called “from India” etc because of the same reasons that the colonizers of the new world called Native Americans “Indians” - makes sense!
Load More Replies...Not "India" actually, it means "Indian" as we thought it was originated from there. Love from Turkey (the country) 😊
“Reading about interesting things is great for our curiosity,” the expert said, discussing how browsing random fascinating facts like the ones on this list can affect one’s curiosity. “Sometimes, we don't know what we don't know, and reading a fun fact can spark the desire to dig deeper. It makes us want to learn more.”
Shirley Temple led an extremely successful life as a diplomat after her childhood acting career. She was present in Czechoslovakia when the Soviet's cracked down on them (as in, she seen people killed). Later after the fall of the USSR, she was the head of establishing diplomatic relations between the US and Czechoslovakia.
When she left acting in her 20s, she got involved in politics, and ran for congress as a Republican but lost. However she got involved with Nixon's in 1968 campaign as a result, and in 1969 Kissenger tapped her as a delegate to the 24th United Nations General Assembly. In 1974 President Ford made her ambassador to Ghana for 2 years before Ford recalled her to the US to be appointed as Chief of Protocol of the United States (The official State Department Advisor to the President, Liasson for foreign leaders who visit the US, a Deputy Secretary of State and Ambassador). IN 1989 GW Bush made her ambassador to Czechoslovakia (US had relations with them before her, she replaced Julian Niemczyk, she did the post-communism relations), and she was there during the fall of communism and became a friend of Václav Havel, and used it to build post Cold-War relations with the US. From her retirement in 1993 until her death in 2014, she was active in the GOP, and attended every GOP convention
She used to come to the aaa where I worked... she was a gracious and lovely person to us there.
I second that! She came into the department store I worked at in the Bay area quite a few times and she was kind to everyone.
Load More Replies...i am czech. and i didint know, i only known shirley temple drink....
Diplomatic rumor was that the first country Nixon tried to appoint her ambassador to refused to accept her, basically saying "Shirley Temple? Are you serious, guy?"
For sure a false rumor. He first ambassador post was Ghana under President Ford. Under Nixon she served on the US Delegation to the UN (with a personal recommendation from Kissenger) , and later headed a trade delegation to Europe. She was known as a North West Africa expert during her stint at the UN, which is why Ghana welcomed her in 1974 when Ford promoted her.
Load More Replies...I was a window cleaner in my youth and I washed the windows in her house/mansion. She lived near Marion Davies—the Woodside area of the San Francisco Peninsula.
Trees communicate.
Trees communicate in at least two ways. One is by releasing chemicals (terpenes) into the air that other trees can smell. A second way is by touching roots, and sending chemical signals through the root contact point. There may be a third way, direct contact between branches.
They can also communicate through networks of fungi that surround their roots.
Load More Replies...They also have sex and my sinuses hate it. Tree pollen season is horrible for me.
The root connections are seriously cool. Fungi attatch themselves to the roots of trees forming mycorrhizal connections and provide the tree with water and nutrients in exchange for gluecose. The fungi can supposedly relay chemical and electrical messages between trees and even allow them to exchange nutrients and feed each other.
I learned this in the documentary The Hidden Life of Trees. The whole documentary is MIND-BLOWING. Highly recommend.
100% agree. I knew what to expect and was still left in awe.
Load More Replies...Crops do, too. However, the original form, up to the 1960s or so. They communicated by chemicals when being gnawed on by insects or mice, which triggered the other plants to produce and incorporate bitter (or unappealing) tasting stuff, so the majority of a field was spared. Modern plants are silent, they have lost this natural reaction.
The nice "smell" of fresh cut grass is actually a chemical warning to other plants.
You have a holey face. Your sinuses are big empty cavities in your skull. The maxillary sinus is the biggest. It’s just under your eye (under the cheek bones) and I swear you could fit 3 grapes in each one.
Except for when they are full of snot.
Please excuse me while I go see if I can shove 3 grapes up my maxillary sinus hole. Worst case scenario, I fail the objective. Best case scenario, I get to eat grapes, the ones I didn't stick up my nose hole of course. :-) Lol!
My sinus above my right eye is the one that hurts when I get an infection. But I only knew about the cheek one after my doctor went, "What about this one?" and poked me so hard I saw stars. Liz, I adore you woman, but maybe don't poke people so hard.
Ugh, every time I get a cold I can feel those stupid holes, as well as the connections between my nose and my eyes.
This fact must be widely known, judging by the number of people who have informed me that I have a hole in my head.
Then why does it feel like a watermelon up my nose during a sinus headache
On behalf of all healthcare workers; I know what you're thinking, so please don't! Although I do enjoy watching a sinus flushing (waaaaaay to much).
According to Dr. Hamilton, curiosity is the spark to all that organizations want to achieve regarding innovation, engagement, and everything that makes people productive. “When we learn, we find out where we are the best fit in our jobs, and that aligns us with better careers.
“The real trick is determining what inhibits our curiosity,” she said, suggesting that the Curiosity Code Index assessment is a great way to do that. “Like DiSC or other personality tests, it only takes around 10 minutes to find out the things that have held us back from learning and exploring. More importantly, it offers insights into overcoming those factors that have stopped us from developing our curiosity.”
Modern postural yoga-- the type and style predominantly practiced in Western countries-- is about 100 years old. It was invented in India by Indians and is derived mostly from British calisthenics and Swedish gymnastics. It was *specifically marketed to affluent westerners by Indians* as a superior form of spiritual and physical exercise. It's working as designed for its target market.
Asanas, the physical postures or “exercise” part of yoga, have been around for a very long time. Specific sequences and the naming of these postures is more recent, but still based on a practice that prexists tue western version.
Yes, it's terrible. The trouble is that most of it comes from French SE Asia, as was, i.e. the Vietnam area. Chinese food in other countries also reflects some regions more than others, for example in the UK it was large derived from Hong Kong and Cantonese influences, in Western US and Canada much more from Shanghai and Peking.
Load More Replies...I don't know if this is true or not but I just read somewhere that many injuries result from yoga. Is this legit?
If people are getting injured doing yoga, it's because they are not working with their body and are instead pushing too hard in an effort to get more flexible than they are. Or they fall over during the balancing bits!
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Chicago "The Windy City" is known for political wind not regular wind.
And that's where the DNC is having it's convention this year. That's going to be interesting since the last time The Democratic Convention in 1968 was a total riot.
Better than having it in the city of Milwaukee. You know the place that the Republican nominee for president called "horrible" when he forgot the RNC will be held there.
Load More Replies......and the wind off lake michigan. which falls under the category of regular wind, I suspect. when the wind blows out at Wrigley Field, it's a tremendous home run hitters park. when it blows in, it's a real good pitcher's park. The wind is real, not just metaphorical...
I went to college in Crown point and was in Chicago every weekend, and I can tell you the wind up there is way worse than anywhere else. Not saying the political thing is incorrect, just, the real wind is underrated. I was blown away more times than not on any given weekend.
Sharks predate trees.
And they appeared on Earth at the same time the rings around Saturn formed (Coincidence?)
You're right, and the sharks are younger than the mountains, but not blowin like the breeze.
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The brain is the only organ that named itself.
Less impressive when you realize it also named all the other organs too.
After all these years and my brain has never said a thing to me. Rude, just rude. I feel slighted. (sigh)
Your brain think of what to call things, so it thoughy of the name for itself. Edit: because English is hard
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When you put a bumper sticker or decal on, spray a couple sprays of diluted soapy water or simple green on the surface of the car first, then put the sticker down…. And you can slide it around until it’s even and centered. Use a credit card to squeegee the moisture out from underneath, pat dry, and leave it alone. It’ll adhere as it dries.
No more crooked stickers.
This is called the "wet method." I use it all them time when applying vinyl to some projects.
Same, I do this at work when I have fancy window or vehicle decals to apply
Load More Replies...Fun fact, bumper stickers make you a target no matter if it's a good message or bad. Criminals can gain knowledge of your family if you have those stick people family bumper stickers. Even stickers that day you sort the police or gay pride makes you a target. Just don't mess up your car with opinions or things you do. A car salesman buddy also said the dealership will actually knock down trade in value on a car that is plastered with stickers. Your car is not a posterboard you want actively displaying anything.
Amen on the car salesman thing - I work for an auto group and we ruined one of our vehicles by putting cheap crappy stickers on it for a month-long sale. 🙃 you can see the outline of the stickers in the paint and we can’t fix it, Oopsies.
Load More Replies...I appreciate this tip!! I have some dated stickers (maybe a year old) I'm worried won't come off the backing properly. I have a couple of those Cricut stickers, if you're familiar. I finally decided where to put them. Plus, I got another car....well, almost a year ago, but I am little slow on getting stuff done. Thanks again--whoever you are, even though I know you won't see this.
Solar eclipses are a completely random quirk of arbitrary factors.
The sun is roughly 400x bigger than the moon. The sun is also roughly 400x further away from earth than the moon.
Nothing created or enforces that ratio. It’s just a random happenstance that from our view, on the surface of this planet, the sun and moon seem roughly the same size, and can perfectly overlap.
And in about 50,000 years we will only get annular eclipses because the moon is slowly moving away from us. It's a quirk of more arbitrary factors than OP thinks.
The existence of the human race is a completely random quirk of arbitrary factors.
This is the only time in the Earth's history that has annular eclipses. Before it just blotted out the whole sun during an eclipse because the moon was too close. The percentage of the suns disc occulted by the moon will shrink going forward as the moon is moving away from us at about an inch and a half per year. So yeah, very arbitrary.
Its not a completely random quirk, if the moon was any size bigger we would have ecliptions too
The chainsaw was invented as a tool to aid in childbirth. Rotating blades to get through the pelvic bone…..
Look up Symphysiotomy on Wikipedia and the feel free to be horrified that people actually did that.
Realise that it was done with no anesthetic or pain relief, and the alternative was usually death. The result was probrably usually death too, given that there were also no antibiotics, and sterile procedure was usually limited to making sure that hands and equipment were not visibly dirty.
And of course invented by a man. Another clear example of why men should not be in control of anything related to women's reproduction!!
Thousands of lives were saved. Bah, humbug! Horrid, horrid men saving lives like that.
Load More Replies...If I were a woman in those days I'd use it to cut something off the man so I'd not have to worry about them using it on me
Why the hell would they be cutting bone during childbirth? I thought the only thing they had to cut through was the skin the muscle and fat on the lower stomach. Then the sale that the baby is in. There isnt even bones in that area of the tummy to cut through. Am I missing something here?
It's still used in some parts of the world if C-section isn't an option. The cartilage of the pubic bone is cut to allow the pelvis to widen further if the baby is stuck.
Load More Replies...PELVIC BONE? I don't think that is the normal method of birthing! Pelvic bone? WTF?
A compressed spring weighs more than when the same spring is at rest. The stored potential energy of the compressed spring makes it heavier.
Really puts e = mc^2 into perspective.
So if a weeping angel touched a spring they could live off it and not need to send humans into the past? Where's the Doctor? We should inform him forthwith!
I remember Thirteen became a WA herself.
Load More Replies...This is complete and utter BS. Compressing a spring does not increase it's mass or weight. and the potential energy of a spring as virtually zero to do with E=mc^2. E = 1/2kx^2 is the actual formula for a spring's potential energy. Where k is the spring constant, and x is the displacement, i.e. how much the spring is compressed or tensioned.
Not specifically true. The coils contain the potential energy to be converted into kinetic energy but that doesn't make the spring any "heavier."
Yeah, that's what I thought too. Is the op wrong or are we missing something?
Load More Replies...Don't try weighing it on a scale though. E=mC^2 means M=E/(C^2). So the amount of energy divided by the speed of light squared. If you could store a nuclear bomb worth of energy in a spring, that spring might weige an extra gram with all that stored energy.
Each (human) cell in your body has over 2m (6ft) of DNA in it.
Yes. Histones (chromosomal proteins) wrap/roll up the DNA small enough to fit into a cell. We did an experiment in Microbiology with strawberries and Beano. In the end, the strawberry had all this white "goop" coming out of it, making it visible to see DNA.
Load More Replies...Somehow I get the feeling some people's DNA may be quite a few feet shorter than that.
Each cell in your body is more complex than a jumbo jet and can reproduce itself.
If you took all of your DNA in your body and stretched it out straight... you'd be dead.
I have never shared any of my DNA with a banana!
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The emotion you feel when realizing, that the people around you are complex human beings like yourself with emotions, memories and "someone inside there", is called Sonder.
What is it called when you realise that some people are just shallow beings with no human emotions other than greed? (Thinking of the Nestlé heads for example.)
Is it called the same thing when you realize the people around you are total idiots?
But “sonder” is much more specific than just a feeling of empathy - it’s that moment of realization, and the feeling of wonder that goes along with it. Empathy and Sonder go hand in hand but they’re “more like sisters than twins,” they’re actually not two interchangeable words that mean the same thing :)
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People aren’t persuaded to change their views with facts and this his been studied and proven.
ETA there’s a YouTube video on the BrainCraft channel about this. It was put up in the last day or so if anyone is curious..
It has been shown that the best way to try and change someone's mind is to empathise with their reason for feeling the way they do. So, for example, with a couple I know who turned out to be antivaxxers (I had no idea before the pandemic!), I sympathised with their underlying fears (loss of control, excessive fear for their child's health - understandable since they had nearly lost him at birth) and then changed the subject. When I brought up my own stance on vaccines later, they were able to listen. Only by doing that and giving time for the information to sink in where they are not under scrutiny were they able to come around to vaccinating their kid against other childhood illnesses (admittedly not Covid).
Yep. Facts won't change minds of those who have dug in deep. Only an emotional appeal will.
Load More Replies...The only thing we know that works for certain is to be visited in the night by three spirits.
Not sure that they think facts don't matter. More so they indulge in alternative facts and made up facts and outright lie about the facts sometimes.
Load More Replies...A part of changing someone's ideas may have to do with affirmation. Someone alluded to that before. We all want to be listened to and be really heard. Our feelings, thoughts and strong beliefs go to the heart of who we are. Our very heart. Affirmation does this. You don't have to agree with who you're talking with but you have to actively repeat what they say to you in ways that make them know you understand where they're coming from. It works for both their understanding and yours. Then when you later express your ideas, your spouse or friends or colleagues are more inclined to listen. Maybe even be persuaded. It takes effort but people who feel valued are more likely to change ideas and actions.
The amount of control our amygdala has over us is amazing. We THINK we are thinking but we are feeling with words.
This especially applies to people who believe what they are told to believe by figures of "authority" because challenging authorities on anything that has been presented as "fact" is politically incorrect. Science is all about continually questioning science, but many people would rather hold onto what has been presented as scientific dogma no matter what. Banning scientific discussion on sensitive topics in the name of "science" is ironic because challenging science is how you do science.,
It depends on who is doing the challenging: scientists challenging each other is how you do science. As Isaac Asimov said: “There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.”
Load More Replies...That explains Trump Republicans, really. They call themselves the party of "law and order", but are supporting a convicted felon. 😂
Load More Replies...Too many people confuse 'Facts' with Statistics or opinions. Statistics can be manipulated along with polling and surveys. Opinions... well, we all know about those. Also, what someone may deem factual today, may actually change after gaining more information/technology.
100% but only people that understand that will change their minds and that is few
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Infinitely more planes in the ocean than locomotives in the sky.
It is difficult to soar with eagles when you work with turkeys.
Load More Replies...This is the dumbest fact ever. Infinitely more trees on land than plants in the sky. WTF does this even mean. Of course locomotives aren't in the sky. What is the point of this??
And even more boats in the desert. Specifically in Uzbekistan.
Let's calculate this. There are 12 commonly known boats in the Aral Sea Graveyards, and boats don't tend to run aground in the middle of the desert. There is a crashed Catalina flying boat in Saudi Arabia as well. In the WW2 Pacific Theatre alone, over 34,000 planes were lost in action. Most of those planes went down in the sea.
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Nike has warranties on their shoes. If yours remains in the tread life and within the warranty date, you just make a claim and they’ll give you a voucher for new shoes and paid postage to send the old ones back.
Target will also take any Cat and Jack clothes back for an exchange as your kids grow.
Brake pads only need to be bought once for the life of a car. They are then warranty exchanged as you wear them out.
Clearly, I’m a dad.
At least one of these - the brake pads, is completely untrue. Anyone getting "free" replacements has signed up for a lifetime servicing contract or similar. They're treated as 'consumables', just like wiper blades and tyres, and indeed many other components including some engine parts that have a defined life span.
...and the ones they use to replace them are not the highest quality. I do my own brakes and use EBC pads. Pricey, but excellent.
Load More Replies..."Brake pads only need to be bought once" sounds like "cheap climbing equipment is great, it is not expansive and lasts for your whole life".
Well, it might last you for the rest of your life (life may be drastically shortened due to cheap carabiner. We take no responsibility for this)
Load More Replies..."I can get a good look at a T-Bone by sticking my head up a bull's a$$, but I'd rather take a butcher's word for it."
So I've done this at a Nike store near me several times. I typically wear Air Max or Vapor Max, which can cost over $200 (I used to stand on my feet upwards to 12 hrs/day and I'm going to make sure my feet are comfortable). A few times the air has leaked out the pockets, making them squishy. They take the shoes, look inside at the serial codes inside (they even have QR codes), and it tells them how much the shoe is worth. They then deduct that from a new purchase. It works out pretty well. I've been able to get a new pair for free every time.
Cat and jack is not supposed to be returned because your kid out grows them. They have a generous return policy but it's not meant to be used to change your kid's wardrobe every season. This is why we can't have nice things, too many people abuse the system and it gets changed.
Yeah, I would think Target might be willing to exchange a couple of items if they were unworn and still had the tag on them (ones you just didn't get to during that size period). But that would definitely be abusing the system to do it all the time. I just try to thrift shop to save money, including on Mercari and other websites and stores. And I can make a little money taking clothes to Kid-to-Kid. There are way better ways to get a deal on kids clothes rather than taking advantage of a store's return policy over and over (in my opinion).
Load More Replies...It's a classic case of playing the odds. "Free brake pads" is rooted in data that suggests a large percentage of people pay no attention to their brakes until they think something is wrong with them, and by that time it's usually more than just the pads that need to be fixed/replaced.
Most of the time, the closest planet to Earth is Mercury. Actually, most of the time Mercury is the closest planet to all of the other planets, too. Even Pluto.
If you don't believe it, try a quick experiment. Take four cookies (or other small objects) and line them up on a table in front of you, perpendicular to your body. The closest cookie represents Earth. The next cookie is Venus, then Mercury, then the farthest cookie is the Sun. Obviously, Venus is closest to Earth in this configuration.
Now move Venus and Mercury in their "orbits" 90 degrees to the right (or left, it doesn't matter) of the Sun. Measure the distance from Earth to Mercury and Venus. Mercury is now closest to Earth.
Move Venus and Mercury another 90 degrees and Mercury is obviously closer, even without measuring, but measure it if you want to.
Move Venus and Mercury another 90 degrees and you'll have the mirror image of the first 90 degrees configuration. Measure it if you want to. Mercury is still closest to Earth.
You have to move Venus and Mercury closer to the Earth before you get to a point where they are the same distance from Earth. It works like this for all the planets.
Venus and Mercury and don't revolve together like this in real life. They revolve at different speeds. But over thousands or millions of years, it all averages out.
Did you know that the orbit of Mercury is an eccentric ellipse, even more eccentric than the orbit of Pluto.
You only need 39 digits of pi to calculate the radius of the universe to the width of a single atom.
It sounds BS but it's true. For the average engineer or scientist you'll never need more than 3.141.
I can't even remember how many times I have sat around pondering the radius of the universe.
You need at least 5 when doing 3D projections for a computer game or it looks wrong.
Currently Pi has been calculated to approximately 105 TRILLION with a "T" digits.
I have that exact model of calculator. It got me through algebra and calculus more than 30 years ago. Still have it, still works. I finally had to upgrade when I took linear algebra because it couldn’t do matrices.
Studies show that taking steroids and not exercising builds more muscle than exercising without taking steroids. The percentage of obese people who get to and maintain a healthy weight is statistically lower than the percentage of people who survive a gunshot to the head.
This sounds like "facts" from a questionionable nutritional supplement site.
It does, but: "Analysis of primary care EHRs for a large population based sample of men and women over a 9-year period revealed that the probability of obese patients attaining normal weight was very low. The annual probability of patients with simple obesity attaining a normal body weight was only 1 in 131 for women and 1 in 225 for men. " (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK362452/) "Civilians with gunshot wounds to the head or other penetrating brain injuries have a 42% chance of surviving, according to a study of more than 400 patients at two major trauma centers" (https://medicine.yale.edu/news-article/gunshot-wound-to-the-head-not-a-death-sentence-1/)
Load More Replies...That second fact should really be wider known. A lot of people assume that obese people are just lazy and gluttonous, but there is honestly almost no way to get the weight off and keep it off. Laziness has nothing to do with it.
Also, all the crazy interesting observations coming out of the relatively new fecal transplant treatment. Clinics are beginning to report observations that some 20% of their donors produce stool that radically (ive seen it occasionally described as "miraculous") improves the life of the recipient. We're talking body shape changes to match the donors', chronic illness going into remission, etc. I've also seen numerous reports of the opposite where people take on new, undesirable donor characteristics. People who never struggled with weight suddenly gaining tremendous amounts of weight, developing acne, weird habits, even one recent (not yet substantiated) report of a man who reported symptoms consistent with the perimenopausal symptoms of the donor! Very intriguing early research, but I suspect it will lead to some of the most remarkable medical discoveries of this generation.
Load More Replies...The percentage of obese people who shoot steroid users has never been studied.
I'm one of them. I was 214 lbs at 5' 1" tall in 2021 and riddled with health issues. I am now 146lbs, reversed all of my obesity related diagnoses (pre-diabetes, uncontrolled hypertension, high cholesterol). I also walk approximately 9 miles per day between my job and training my dog, have eliminated sodium (as much as can be done) from my diet, cut my sugar intake by easily 90% and have a resting heart rate of 52 beats per minute. I should also add that I quit smoking cigarettes after 40 years over 2 years ago.
This is comparing like 6 different things. Steroids will help you put on muscle, it's also how to gain WEIGHT. muscle weighs more than fat. And if you look at how they calculate BMI many power lifters fall into "obese" when they have no fat on them. ? Oh well, moving on.
Friend of mine in college got thrown out of the Marines for being obese. He was 4'10" with wide shoulders, basically a slightly tall dwarf. His body fat was 0.5%, but the BMI charts said he was obese so out he went.
Load More Replies...I'm actually astonished about the obesity thing, although I can easily imagine that would be true.
Also the more you lose weight, the easier it is to regain it. In other words, yoyo dieting guarantees weight gain, greater than the original body weight. So if you have a health issues, gain weight, lose weight back to close of original weight when better, the next time you have an issue your ability to lose weight is much less, and your set final weight will be higher.
A long a*s time time ago a dude in Egypt paid a guy to walk 8,000 kilometers to a tower to measure the length of it’s shadow & that’s how we found out the earth was round.
Edit: 800km I stand corrected. Still, quite the trip. I hope he paid well.
I would walk 800km and I would walk 800 more just be the man...called guy
Load More Replies...A guy was called Eratosthenes, he didn't walk, he rode a camel, counting the steps and it wasn't a tower, but a deep well. Dude was called king Ptolemy and sure he paid well. And we learned not that the Earth was round, but how big it was.
Eratosthenes. They knew the earth was round in 300BC and he was the first one to measure it. Now in the 21st century we have more flerfs than ever. Why are so many humans deliberately dumb?
Greek mathematicians estimated the circumference of the earth more accurately than mathematicians in Columbus's day
I'm guessing the "dude" that the knowledgeable OP is referring to is Eratosthenes
I can't believe that there are people alive today that still insist that the Earth is flat. People who lived thousands of years ago knew the Earth was round, but in the year 2024 some people still refuse to believe it despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary from history's best scientists and mathematicians.
Johnny Appleseed is a legendary character and we know of him because he spread alcohol through the frontier. He was planting apples for alcohol and was welcomed by so many in their homes because he brought a jug of cider to every home he visited.
The real story is much more complex because apple trees don't breed true from seeds. All of the apple trees we get apples from are clones. If you are interested, read Botany of Desire by Michael Pollan.
John Chapman's trees were all grown from seed though - he was very much against producing trees from cuttings and grafting, thought it was against the natural order of God.
Load More Replies...Johnny Appleseed is a famous character in US-American folk mythology. The best-known version of the legend (taught to children) is that he went all over the newly-settled (by white folks) parts of the country, planting apple trees everywhere he went, which is seen as very wholesome. But the fact is that the apples wouldn't have been any good for eating raw and were meant to be for making hard cider, which seems a little less child-friendly. Johnny Appleseed was a real person, and the actual historical stories about him are FASCINATING.
Load More Replies...I think I read once that he planted apple trees everywhere as a way of claiming land...? "I planted trees here, that's my property."
Nope. He purchased the land, planted nurseries, protectd them, left them in the care of neighbours who sold the trees on shares, and would return every one or two years to tend the nurseries himself.
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There are more plastic pink flamingos than real pink flamingos.
Looks out of the window into my back garden, yes that's absolutely correct
Is this still true if you factor out Florida? (And you always should.)
In water, sound can project downwards, bend back up, hit the surface from below, reflect, go down again, and bend back towards the surface. Multiple times.
it’s the same thing in the air, isn’t it? if the sound encounters an obstacle, it is also deflected
I scuba dive a lot. It's crazy being down there and hearing a boat overhead. You know it's on the surface (duh!), but the way the sound travels makes you look left, right, up, and even down, trying to determine where it's actually coming from. It's cool to experience, but only after you know you're safe.
There are craters on the poles of mercury that are SO DEEP that rays of light from the sun have never directly struck their bottoms, and scientists have found evidence of water ice at the bottom of these craters.
All of the gold discovered thus far would fit in a cube that is 23 meters wide on every side.
And a hecking lot of it comes from one place on Earth: the Witwatersrand in South Africa.
More likely the Reef, which runs from at least Benoni to Krugersdorp
Load More Replies...The density of gold... 19300kg/m³ So... 23 x 23 x 23 = 12,167m³ 12,167 x 19,300 = 234,823,100kg, or 234,823.1 Tonnes
Load More Replies...This i find hard to believe, how are we calculating this. The gold currently in use? what about all the gold in burials, lost and in the sea? if we are including all that then how??
Thus far" kind of gives the answer you're looking for. Thus far, meaning whatever has been found so far. With that information alone, you know it is not referring to gold that has yet to be found. So I'm perplexed at you saying if we include gold lost at sea and buried gold. It's not talking about unfound gold. It's surely possible to do with the gold that has been found thus/so far.
Load More Replies...People with aphakia can see ultraviolet light.
"Aphakia is a condition in which you're missing the lens of one or both of your eyes.” When associated with cataract surgery in adults, this is known as Pseudophakia.
People with aphantasia can not create images in their mind so it is very difficult for them to make visual comparisons (for some this extends to other senses so they are not able to compare tastes or sounds)
I have Aphantasia. For the longest time I thought this was the norm.
Load More Replies...Both. Light is light. UV light is UV light :) doesn’t matter the source. You can still see around your house when the sun goes down at night and you turn on the artificial lightbulbs, right?
Load More Replies...Some people with certain conditions can see UV light. Humans with normal vision can’t. Google “what does UV light look like” and check out the images for some interesting simulations :)
Load More Replies...Felix Baumgartner doesn't have the record for the highest altitude free jump. He did jump from 128k feet (39 km) in 2012, and very publicly. But then Alan Eustace with almost no fanfare jumped from 135k feet (41.4 km) in 2014.
TIL. Eustace did the jump at 57 years old. Former Senior Vice President of Google.
Just watched the video on Youtube. Just speechless at seeing how freaking high he got.
In 1944, 9 American airmen were shot down over the island Chichijima. 8 were captured by Japanese troops and executed, at least 4 were cannibalized by Japanese officers. Reports vary if it was for reasons of starvation or ritual. One airman evaded capture and was eventually rescued. 44 years later he was elected President of the United States. Google "The Chichijima incident" for more info.
Wikipedia: Japanese personnel, were tried in August 1946 in relation to the execution of U.S. Navy airmen, and the cannibalism of at least one of them, during August 1944. Because military and international law did not specifically deal with cannibalism, they were tried for murder and "prevention of honorable burial".
Load More Replies...Future president in question: George H.W. Bush (ie the first President Bush, not the second one)
It takes only 7 pounds of force to rip off a human ear.
In related news, the human head weighs about eight pounds. (A fact that is often repeated in swing dancing lessons while they're explaining to you that if you throw your head back during a dip, your partner might drop you and fall on top of you from the unexpected weight change lol)
Total sidebar but has anyone else cracked their ears. You basically just pull on your ear up and back, I think it feels amazing.
Everything you see around you is literally created by the interaction of electrons and photons (except radiation and gravity.)
Three basic actions create it all:
1) A photon goes from place to place.
2) An electron goes from place to place.
3) An electron emits or absorbs a photon.
Literally that's it.
I think it’s just not well understood. Walk around on the streets of any country and I guarantee you 99% of the people you ask will have no idea what you’re talking about. Some people think science is boring because it’s never been presented to them in a way they can understand :( Some people just don’t have access to education. I’m a big science nerd myself but I still struggle to wrap my head around this one.
Load More Replies...Photons are a form of radiation. Beta rays, a form of radiation, are literally free electrons. I don't know why OP chose to include that bit.
People used to use hollowed human skulls for cups and bowls in ancient England.
I won't crack or steal the cup I promise
Load More Replies...Under the cheekbones, as the three grape person said.
Load More Replies...Bc it was a TBC medicine and antidotum (there were other help, may be frogs eye etc.).
About 90% of humans live on the northern hemisphere.
Still interesting though, the % of land and the % of humans living on that land are not equal
Load More Replies...If you spell out every whole number starting at 0 and ending at 999,999,999, you will not use the letter “B.”.
The actual name of that number is five hundred million. ”half a billion” is just its relation to the number 1 billion.
Load More Replies...The softest wood in the world, is considered a hardwood.
I googled it. The wood in question is called quipo (https://www.wood-database.com/top-ten-softest-woods/), and it has the same hardness as balsa wood.
Softwood trees have open seeds (pine cones). Hardwood trees have enclosed seeds.
All of the planets in our solar system, if laid side by side, would fit between the earth and the moon.
I feel like it would just be one enormous tidal wave going around the entire earth as it turns lmao
Load More Replies...Wrong. Distance between earth and moon = 384,400 km Combined distance of gas giants diameters (Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus) = 407,042 km
That is the average distance between the earth and moon - it varies! Also, gas giants are wider at their equator, when this measurement uses mean radius, not equatorial radius. This does work by mean measurements, only at the period of greatest distance between the earth and moon.
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In Uranus it rains giant diamonds.
I asked my mother in law if she had “diamonds in Uranus”. She was so uptight that her turds formed diamonds.
Load More Replies...Same thing on Jupiter and Saturn and a lot of gas giants. They have such intense storms and the pressure exerted by their atmospheres is so intense that it creates the perfect conditions to create diamonds
Well it's an ice giant so it doesn't have a surface so to speak.
Load More Replies...And the wind on the planet can reach speeds up to 700 km/h - wouldn't recommend trying to collect them
How do we know this? Like whats the process to finding this out? Did someone visit uranus? Did someone use a telescope and see diamonds raining down on uranus? I need answers please!!!
A combo of physics and chemistry. Uranus has a lot of organic gases in its atmosphere. When there’s a lightning storm then the lightning breaks off the carbon atoms and due to the intense pressure in the atmosphere they become diamond
Load More Replies...The Magnetic Poles are moving and accelerating.
Even more interesting is the wobble in the Earth's rotation axis, the Chandler wobble, which reversed phase in the year 2005. https://arxiv.org/pdf/0908.3732
WD40 removes road tar from your car.
If it won't stick and you need it to, use duct tape. If it sticks and you don't want it to, use WD40. All you need in life.
I keep rolls of duct tape in my classroom. I always say, "Duct tape solves everything." Back of chair comes loose? Duct tape it. Plastic seat of chair pinching you? Duct tape. Poster falling off wall? Duct tape. Class too hot due to sun reflecting off other class? Black cardboard and duct tape. Now to get some WD40. :D
Load More Replies...Bug spray with DEET will clear off the outside dirt and film from headlights pretty good. Spray, let sit for a few seconds and then wipe off really well with paper towels or a cloth
WD40 also keep spiders away. There is a low odour version, spray it around door frames, gargarge door handles plant pot rims...no spiders will go near it
Most homicides in the world are not solved.
The Earth's rotation is speeding up and that means our days are getting slightly shorter. In a decade they will have to make clocks a second shorter.
It has to be the other way around, doesn't it? The Earth's rotation is slowing down due to the transfer of tidal energy from the Earth to the Moon. We've recently stopped with the leap seconds because they are not needed any more.
This also sounded wrong to me because things slow down...not speed up over time. But apparently it's sped up. But they don't think it's going to continue. "To solve all this international timekeepers may need to add a negative leap second— a “drop second.” Though Earth may already be spinning as quickly as it ever will, with a slowdown inevitable." https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamiecartereurope/2022/07/28/earth-is-suddenly-spinning-faster-why-our-planet-just-recorded-its-shortest-day-since-records-began/
Load More Replies...No it isn't. The long term trend is the Earth is slowing down because of gravitational interaction with the moon. 65MYA when dinosaurs walked the Earth, the day was only 23:30 long. I have no idea where OP got that 1s in 10 years BS but it's wrong. There is a short term acceleration occurring in the core but it's adding MILLISECONDS in ten years not a whole second.
This seems false. Things like tidal forces and cooling of earth’s core should be causing our rotation to slow down
Did you look anything up before saying it seems false? I’m curious now, a lot of people seem to be claiming false but when I look it up, it’s confirmed that we seem to be spinning faster.
Load More Replies...The average human being is asian in appearance.
Asians have a lot of different appearances. Would the average human look Chinese? Indian?
I've seen this statistic before, so I can answer that. It refers to Eastern Asian people such as the Chinese, not the Indians
Load More Replies...Soo.. am I above average or below average? Because based on this fact, I am definitely not average.
Neither. You're diagonal from average. Catty-corner, even.
Load More Replies...That if you enter on a freeway the Wrong Way at night, all the reflectors you see on the freeway will reflect as Red. Hopefully the driver can figure out something is wrong and at least pull over.
A woman was watching the news on TV one night and saw a live report that someone was driving the wrong direction on the freeway. She knew her husband was driving through that area that night, so she became alarmed and called him. She said, "Some idiot is driving the wrong way on the freeway!" He answered, "THEY ALL ARE!!!"
A friend of mine did this as we were leaving Rocky Horror late one Saturday night. I'm amazed that I stayed as calm as I was. "Um, Megan? There's this whole median thing going on, you might wanna figure out..."
How funny, I was driving back from Rocky once with my friends and we suddenly saw lights coming right at us- it was two cars on the interstate, going the wrong way on our side. They were drag racing. Ironically at a later time my friend was killed by a drunk driver this way.
Load More Replies...I've seen enough dash cam videos to realize that 90% of the US can't drive and don't deserve licenses.
When dinosaurs were walking around, our planet was on the opposite side of the galaxy.
And that changed when they stopped walking around and invented the skateboard?
Your mention of dinos and skateboards reminded me of Denver the last dinosaur. He's my friend and a whole lot more. 😁🦕🛹🦖
Load More Replies...So if I’m somehow able to block out the disk of the galaxy and peer across then I’d be able to see the dinosaurs on earth with a super powerful telescope?
The average life expectancy figure accounts for deaths at all ages. The longer you live, the higher your overall probability of exceeding that number. Also, the probability of someone dying in their first year of life is similar to a person dying at any given age in their 60s.
This is why life expectancy numbers in earlier centuries are so startlingly low: the number is skewed by the high rate of infant/child mortality. People who reached adulthood would very likely have lived longer than the "average life expectancy" age.
Yep. Tis why I have gotten so much surprise from people when I state that General Cao Cao was in his mid 60s when he died. "But he was born around 155AD!" Yep, and only died when he did because he refused surgery for his brain tumour because it would cut his hair.
Load More Replies...Mycelium, the organism that bears mushrooms, is neither flora (plants) nor fauna (animal), but rather fungi. So, they are neither animal nor plant.
It should be. However if you were at school in the 70s and haven't been paying attention since, you might still believe that fungi are plants, designated saprophytes
Load More Replies...I knew a fungi, but he was named Captain Erdossy, not Obvious. (Erdossy was the CO of my ship and was awesome!). Edit: spelling.
Load More Replies...Yeah? I think everyone knew this? On a sidebar, I've tried a few times growing shrooms. I did well with the edible ones, oyster and reishi, but every time I tried magic shrooms I just got mold. (Don't worry, totally legal in Colorado.) Pretty sure the old spores I was using were contaminated because I bought new spores a few weeks ago and I have almost completely innoculated my grain, I've got mycelium! Pretty soon I can mix it with substrate and start fruiting my mushrooms! So excited. Mushrooms and mycelium are really really cool. There's so much we don't even know about mycelium networks.
Look for Liberty Caps in lawns that are fertilized with manure - darned nice high and have a unique look (we used to go to certain lawns in the fall to get high)
Load More Replies...*Gasp* Does this also mean that amoebae aren’t animals and plants? Does this mean they’re from monera? Shocking!
Better would be that the mycelium is the "important" part of the organism. Mushroom is just "fungi blooming".
Imagine my situation, I'm a Botanist with a Master's degree in Mycology (fungi)... So I'm a plant biologist with a degree on something that isn't even a plant. 🥹🥴
Perhaps more surprising would be that fungi are more closely genetically related to animals than plants.
No. I'm vegan. I don't eat animals. Therefore I eat plants and fungus
Load More Replies...If everyone on earth was standing shoulder to shoulder, front to back, they'd all fit comfortably within the tiny state of Rhode Island.
XKCD (Randell Munroe) used Rhode Island for this. It does not end well.... https://what-if.xkcd.com/8/
Did anyone do the math on this one? Okay, I did. Surprised by result. So 8.1 million people divided into 1214 square miles = 0.239 people per ft2. Or an area of 4.18ft2 per person. Or 0.389 m2 per person.
Dude, I can't even stand close to my hot neighbour without my wife making it uncomfortable.
If all the humans stood side by side to circumnavigate the planet, many would drown. Fact
If your intestines are in the way during abdominal surgery, standard procedure is to scoop them out and dump them in a bowl for the duration, then basically pour them back in when you're done. As long as you don't pull enough to create an actual knot, the guts will wiggle themselves back into exactly the same shape and configuration they had before being disturbed.
The intestines are moved out of the way and held in place with surgical retractors. They are NOT “scooped out and dumped in a bowl for the duration!” 😅. Source: circulator (surgical nurse) for over a decade
I can second that (also surgical nurse for a long time)
Load More Replies...As for the 'they will wiggle themselves back into place', that is not a quick and painless stage. I had a piece of my large intestine removed so they pulled it out, cut the offending part out, sewed it back together and stuffed it back. It took 5 days of obnoxious air pockets and cramps before the bowel was finally in place again.
I has a hysterectomy a few years ago. I had the same symptoms that you are describing. Plus a very painful air pocket in my right upper shoulder, more towards my neck. It took about 3 days for the air to settle in my tummy area. Then alomost 7 days for the air pocket in my neck to subside. It was a very unpleasant experience.
Load More Replies...Explains why Alison Botha recovered so well after being eviscerated and having her throat cut. (They cut her throat so badly she couldn't hold her head up - she lifted it with one hand, held her intestines with the one, staggered onto a highway and collapsed. And recovered. And yes, they caught the guys who did it.)
Yep and i'ts quite an easy procedure. They are so lenghty that you can manage to put them on another table at distance from the body.
The carbon dioxide laser is the most popular industrial laser in the world. You can hold whatever opinion you want on climate change, but carbon dioxide is so good at making heat it’s used to generate laser beams.
This reads like someone thinks that people who believe in climate change just really have it in for carbon dioxide...
Sounds the opposite to me, they're saying that carbon dioxide is so increadably good at insulating heat that it's used for industrial stregnth lazers, and therefore is very good at making the earth hot
Load More Replies...So...if we are having so many issues with carbon dioxide causing climate change, shouldn't we be planting more plants and trees to offset this increase, instead of tearing them up/down to install a concrete jungle?
Cleopatra exists closer to us in time than she does to building of the Great Pyramid.
It seems this fact is presented in every single "facts people don't know" post on BP
Yep, any BP regular ( or any other list site ) knows this by now.
Load More Replies...This would be a great article if so many of these "facts" weren't bunkum.
"What are incredible facts that Bored Pandas do know about?" (1) Most of the facts in the BP list like this are false (2) Most of the facts are repeated over and over (3) Most of the facts are not incredible, they are just lame.
I've read many " facts " posts and doubt the veracity of most of them. If BP allows folks to write and present something as a " fact ", they should also have to provide evidence, eg. article in a peer reviewed journal, quote from Wikipedia, etc.
If squirrels forgot where they put 80% of their winter food they would starve to death! They actually have incredibly good memories and spatial awareness.
The minimum amount of people you'd need for two of them to have the same birthdate is 23.
That's the probable minimum number of people, but obviously the literal minimum is 2.
Load More Replies...I'll be honest, if you just have a general education anywhere (or 20years ago in the US) this isn't news to you. This is a clickbait title.
This would be a great article if so many of these "facts" weren't bunkum.
"What are incredible facts that Bored Pandas do know about?" (1) Most of the facts in the BP list like this are false (2) Most of the facts are repeated over and over (3) Most of the facts are not incredible, they are just lame.
I've read many " facts " posts and doubt the veracity of most of them. If BP allows folks to write and present something as a " fact ", they should also have to provide evidence, eg. article in a peer reviewed journal, quote from Wikipedia, etc.
If squirrels forgot where they put 80% of their winter food they would starve to death! They actually have incredibly good memories and spatial awareness.
The minimum amount of people you'd need for two of them to have the same birthdate is 23.
That's the probable minimum number of people, but obviously the literal minimum is 2.
Load More Replies...I'll be honest, if you just have a general education anywhere (or 20years ago in the US) this isn't news to you. This is a clickbait title.
