A fact my friend wanted me to add:
Nursing sharks do not have a nursing degree!
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@packedwithfacts
A fact my friend wanted me to add:
Nursing sharks do not have a nursing degree!
Squids have donut shaped brains!
Their brains wrap around the esophagus. If they eat something too big, it can press against their brain and cause damage!
Humans can outrun anything (depending)!
Humans have extremely high endurance. This it to the point that, at our prime, we can outlast any animal (except a horse) in a race.
However, we can outlast a horse on a hot day, since we can sweat away most of that heat while horses can’t!
Cite: 1, 2
I dare anyone to outrun an Arabian, they are desert horses built for endurance races lol
Oh, they would absolutely beat you unless it was super hot out. Can’t imagine personally beating one however ooof
Platypi hunt through electroreceptors!
A platypus will close its eyes, mouth, and nose when it dives into the water to hunt. It also can’t even hear. So how do they find their prey?
Well, platypi’s recognizable duck bill is built in with electroreceptors. These help take in electrical impulses from the surrounding area, including those put out by prey. This makes them efficient hunters in the water, able to pinpoint life without even being able to see it.
Even their relative, the echidna, has this ability. Although, the echidna has evolved past needing to use it.
Humans can outrun anything (depending)!
Humans have extremely high endurance. This it to the point that, at our prime, we can outlast any animal (except a horse) in a race.
However, we can outlast a horse on a hot day, since we can sweat away most of that heat while horses can’t!
Cite: 1, 2
what's your favorite mildly interesting wildlife trivia?
The bat is the only flying mammal, and can reach speeds of over 100 mph.
Houseflies hum in the key of F major.
There are 1 quadrillion (one million billion) ants on Earth.
Pigeons are very intelligent.
At birth, a panda is smaller than a mouse.
A group of fireflies is called a Blazin' Squad (we made that up.)
Pigs can't look up, and thereby cannot witness other pigs flying.
Mantis shrimps can punch at 50 miles per hour.
The oldest recorded dog was named Clarence Doublet-Barrelle Bisquit (made up)
Starfish eat inside out.
Octopus are smarter than you think.
Intelligence is often thought to be calculated by looking at the brain, but octopus are proving to be an exception to this.
They have almost the same number of neurons as a dog (~500 million), but only 1/3rd of them are in their head. The rest are actually in their arms. This is also why it often looks like their arms have a mind of their own— they do! Each one acts independently and is capable of tasting, touching, and moving without the main brain.
Cite: 1
Axolotls with frills aren’t at their final growth stage.
Axolotls are capable of going through a metamorphosis where they lose gills and leave the water to live on land (something they can’t do prior). However, they can only do this if they either are injected with iodine, or find some other way to consume it.
They then become this:
Most axolotls never reach this stage, but they can still reproduce without it. This is referred to as ‘Neoteny’ (the ability to reproduce without reaching full evolutionary maturity).
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2,000-year-old luxury Roman villa with “underfloor heating” found in Germany
A luxury Roman villa with a thermal bath and underfloor heating has been unearthed in Kempten, Bavaria, one of the oldest settlements in Germany.
Ancient Romans lived in homes with thermal baths and underfloor heating, as evidenced by an excavation in the Bavarian town of Kempten. The uncovered house is one of the oldest in Germany.
The Domus was large, at least 800 square meters over two stories, and was situated close to the temple district, the most coveted area of the ancient city, on the western edge. It had screed floors, frescoed walls, and private hot baths with hypocaust heating under the floor.
When presenting the excavation, the city reported that the remains that had come to light were among the oldest in Germany. Due to its Roman past, Kempten is more than 2000 years old, making it one of the oldest cities in Germany.
The most exciting thing about the finds for the archaeologists: They belonged to private stone houses. “You won’t find such private buildings in stone anywhere in southern Germany at this early time – at the beginning of the first century,” says Johannes Schiessl from the city archeology department of Kempten. That means: while elsewhere the Roman settlers still lived in wooden and clay buildings, the high society in Cambodunum apparently already resided in chic brick townhouses.
Cambodunum is the oldest German city mentioned in writing. In 15 B.C., Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus, the father of the Germanicus typically associated with that cognomen, and his brother Tiberius razed a Celtic settlement on the site of what would later become Kempten, founded Cambodunum.
The city of Cambodunum was built in the first decade of the new millennium on a typical Roman grid plan, with major public buildings such as baths, temples, and a forum. It served as the region’s administrative center and the residence of the Roman governor of the Roman province of Raetia. Cambodunum remained the province’s capital until 120 A.D., when it was replaced by Augsburg, aka the Roman colony of Augusta Vindelicum.
The discovery of the luxury private Domus underscores that the Romanization of Bavaria, the development of an urban culture mirroring Rome’s, began in Kempten. It also demonstrates that the wealthy homes and significant civic structures in the early city, which were thought to have been constructed primarily of wood, were built with fine stone and brick.
By Leman Altuntaş.
The last execution by guillotine was only in 1977.
Hamida Djandoubi was a convicted murderer in France, becoming the final person ever executed on the guillotine before it was officially abolished in 1981.
A snail can crawl across a razor blade without getting injured. This is possible because they excrete a slime that protects them
Urine does not help a jellyfish sting!
This is an old myth, but there are those that believe that peeing on a jellyfish sting will neutralize the untriggered stingers.
It’s actually the contrary. The sudden chemical change can make the stingers go off instead.
The best suggestion is to use vinegar if you can, and seek medical attention.
There are three types of water in the Amazon rainforest.
Whitewater (not actually white), Blackwater (also not actually black), and Clearwater.
Whitewater
Whitewater is actually a dirty brown colour, much like coffee! Despite how it may appear, it doesn’t get this colour from pollution or mud. Instead, it gets it from the heavy amount of minerals that get absorbed into it.
Blackwater
Once again, this isn’t actually black at all. It’s more a reddish-brown that’s similar to black tea in colour. It’s like this because its absorbing the decaying plants nearby. Specifically tannin from foliage is what’s to blame for the hue shift.
Clearwater
Clearwaters actually match their name for once…
Sentences that mislead your brain at first read actually have a name!
Sentences that makes you interpret it wrong the first time, but are still grammatically correct, are called ‘Garden Path Sentences’.
Here’s a popular example of it:
“The old man the boat.”
Lemurs have two tongues.
The second (called ‘sublingua’ is smaller with no taste buds, and is used to clean the bristles in their mouth.
The sublingua is the light triangle on the regular tongue in this image!
The Trojan Horse is a myth.
Troy was most likely a real place, but there’s no evidence that the Trojan Horse ever actually existed. It was only mentioned in a few poems, most notably the Aeneid by Virgil (an ancient Roman scholar and poet).
There are theories that the Trojan Horse was really just a metaphor for a different event, or that it was written to make the Greek army seem greater than it really was. Either way, it’s a myth I definitely believed for way too long into my life.
Cited Links:
1, 2, 3, 4