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56 Random Facts People Know That Are Useless But Fun To Share With Friends
What's the wildest random fact you know, Pandas? Have you ever heard that flour is insanely flammable, especially when dispersed and thrown into the air? Or did you know that Subway bread contains so much sugar in it that, in Ireland, they're not allowed to legally call it "bread?"
We just found out about these and more interesting gems from several threads online. In one of them, one netizen asked, "What is [the] most 'Why the [heck] do you know that?' fact?" In another, a Threads user wrote: "Teach me something new today. Drop a fact [that is] useless, funny, random… let's share what we know."
And people didn't disappoint, as their brains seem like sponges for useless but fascinating facts. We've gathered the most interesting tidbits of knowledge from these online threads and present the wildest to you here. For example, read on to find out what distance it takes for a human to hear a blue whale's heartbeat!
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Opossums are not related to rodents they are North American marsupials and are related to kangaroos. Also! Their natural body temperature is so low that the rabies virus can barely survive in their system. They can’t get lyme disease. And! They eat approximately two thousand ticks a week. They are immune to most snake venom. They’re the best. 🖤
There are 4 suits in a deck of cards, 1 for each season
There are 52 cards, for the 52 weeks in a year
If you number each card with ace as 1 up to 13 then add all the cards together you get 364.
Add one joker and it’s 365, for the days of the year.
Add the other joker and it’s 366, for a leap year.
An internet modem is named that because in the early days of the "internet" you'd use a modulator and a demodulator to send and receive signals. When engineers figured out how to put it in one unit, they shortened the name to MoDem, short for modulator/demodulator.
The bread in a Subway sandwich has so much sugar in it, that in Ireland it's legally not allowed to be called bread.
Legally, it's confectionery.
Wood is considered far rarer in the cosmos than diamonds. NO where else in the entire galaxy but Earth do you find wood.
Polar bear livers should never be eaten, they're so full of vitamin A that it'll poison you.
Edit: This fact broughy to you by The SAS Survival Handbook, which takes the concept of "survival" way beyond your average hike in the woods.
Back in high school my human geography teacher had a map of European ethnicities on the board and questioned out loud why the Hungarian people were called "Magyars", to which I promptly raised my hand and told him it was because in Hungarian the country is called Magyarorszag (don't remember how it's spelled). Needless to say the room was very impressed.
But I didn't have the heart to tell him it was because I was a Hetalia fan.
EDIT: I guess some people didn't take "Human Geography" in school, but it's the name of the subject. Nonetheless my instructor was indeed of the [intimate] sapien species... or so I was made to believe.
Mantis shrimp have a punch so fast that it boils the water around the punch. With a speed roughly that of a .22 caliber bullet, it can stun some fish instantly and even break a man's finger.
I have many but the first of which is probably: Life wouldn't give you lemons because lemons are *not* a naturally occurring fruit.
If you mix 95% water and 5% potassium hydroxide, in a metal tube with a body inside and heat it up for four to six hours, all that will be left are squishy bones. You can run that through a cremulator and pour sulphuric acid on it to get rid of the bones. It's alkaline hydrolysis. The sulphuric acid thing I added for spice- but yeah. It's actually alot more eco-friendly friendly option than cremation so xD.
Every Kentucky Derby winner since 1982 has been descended from Man o’War, with the exception of 1994 winner Go For Gin.
Horses are obligate nose breathers. Plug their nose and they'll suffocate. Horses can't burp or vomit - the system is one way only. Horses can "passively breathe" while running at high speeds. Their guts slosh around back to front rhythmic pushing air out and pulling it in.
Koala bears have humanlike fingerprints. Some are so similar they are confused under a microscope. I thought this was so interesting.
The word “run” is one of the most complex words in the English language, having ~645 different meanings. ETA: it takes up ~75 columns of text in the Oxford English Dictionary.
The act of throwing somebody out of a window is called defenestration.
The act of of throwing somebody into a fire is called decrepitation.
Floccinaucinihilipilification is the act of judging something as worthless.
So technically you could do all three in just a few seconds. You could floccinaucinihilipilificate a person and choose to both defenestrate and decrepitate them in response if there is a fire lit underneath the window you plan to throw them from. Don't do that tho, I just like silly words.
Corpses at the bottom of Lake Superior (they don't float to the surface like in other bodies of water) stay preserved for much longer than normal because the conditions of the water are ideal for preserving corpses. Some are still in recognizable condition even decades after getting in there.
Kushim (Sumerian: 𒆪𒋆 KU.ŠIM) is the oldest documented name in human history. It is found on several circa 5,000 years old Proto-cuneiform claytablets from Mesopotamia.
Not the coolest, but just baffling...There has never been a record of a blind schizophrenic...
Bananas are berries, but strawberries aren't, and strawberries, cherries, peaches, and roses all come from the same family, no wonder why they are all romanticized
Your brain consumes about 20% of your energy, even when you’re doing nothing… Thinking is one of the most expensive things you do. So make sure whatever you’re thinking about is literally worth the effort.
Quokkas may be the happiest animal on the planet, but throw their babies at predators to escape
A Portuguese Man of War isn't technically a jellyfish, but is actually a siphonophore, where several organism comprise themselves to create a larger collective of one.
Edit: As u/refaelzat pointed out, the Portuguese Man of War is still a jellyfish while also being a siphonophore. I'm not exactly sure what the correct classification is for this, though.
The speed of sound varies with temperature of air. Sound travels slower in Antarctica than it does in Florida.
Koalas have smooth brains. This is bc they are so low effort and only eat eucalyptus (which is actually toxic to them). When they are babies they can’t start eating the leaves as soon as they can eat solids they actually attach themselves to their moms [rear] and eat their moms p**p to start gaining the immunity to the eucalyptus poison.
Children between age 1 and 6 have both sets of their teeth in their skulls at the same time. Also, children only have 20 teeth, adults have 32. Where did the other 12 come from??
If you really want to get your hands on some industrial or commercial grade explosives, robbing a construction company is the way to go.
Macchu Picchu was abandoned by the Inca soon after Spaniards arrived, and Europeans didn't find it / know about it until the 20th century.
If you brush your teeth twice a day and 2m each then you would spend 0.28% of your lifetime brushing. For some reason I had it in note.
I learnt that you cannot/ shouldn't pick up a human head, as its very unbalanced and will most likely roll out your hands.
That and the skin by your neck is so stretchy, you can rotate your head I think 3 times before the skin rips.
Both I learnt in reddit threads. Both got me weird looks at gatherings when I bring it up.
The reason why most people always feel tired even when they get a full night of sleep is because over time we acquire a "sleep debt" that we rarely make even. It usually starts around preschool age when napping stops becoming part of our daily routine.
The brain named itself the brain and also our noses is always in view but our brains make us ignore them
A baby doesn’t know they’re their own person until 6 months out of the womb. They think they’re still attached to their mother
The buried treasure of Montezuma is most likely near Kanab, Utah. Misfortune has met nearly anyone who has tried to get into the underwater cave it is suspected to be in.
People have tried to drill through the ground above the cave and they found gold on the drill bit, but the driller and his wife passed away from heart conditions and such that night. The hole was sealed with cement afterwards. Divers who searched for the treasure reported seeing ghosts of Native Americans and such guarding the area while others had their oxygen tanks shut off and their regulators ripped out.
Montezuma was known to have his men sacrificed when they buried treasure so that their spirits would guard it. I have personal connections to one of the first divers who went down there, but he, like most of the other divers, refuses to talk about what happened down there. He just warns people to leave it alone, and he hasn't been the same since he went down there.
I've been to that exact lake a few times in my life. It is the most eerily still place I've been to in that state and it has a highway right next to it for crying out loud. Something or someone wants the blood money of Montezuma to stay far away from modern human hands as possible.
Injecting elemental mercury into your veins to become a superhero, while colossally stupid, is not typically fatal. Mercury in its elemental form is not water-soluble and therefore doesn't get absorbed into the bloodstream.
The smell when you file your nails is the same smell as if you were to file or cut through your bones.
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