Showing posts with label #weirdfacts. Show all posts

You've Heard These Myths Before, And Maybe You Believed Them, But They're False


There are a few myths out there that we’ve all come across at some point, and if you hear something enough, it’s only natural to believe that it’s true. But what these commonly known “facts” all have in common is that they’re not true. Most of them were made up on the basis of misconceptions, misunderstandings, and downright intentional hoaxes.


Check out these 23 “facts” below to see what’s really going on here.




1. You lose most of your body heat through your head.



This is true — but only in infants. After infancy, you lose just as much heat from your arms as you do from your head. The only differences is that, unless you’re wearing a hat, your head is often exposed to the elements.





2. Cell phones give you cancer.



Cell phones use radiofrequency, not radiation. Ionizing radiation has been shown to cause DNA damage and cancer, but radiofrequency has not been shown to do that. Gab away, friends.





3. Different places on your tongue taste different things.



You can sense all tastes on all parts of your tongue.





4. Fortune cookies are a Chinese tradition.



They’re a Chinese food tradition now, but the custom of putting paper messages inside of cookies is actually a Japanese-American invention. It was later appropriated by Chinese-American restauranteurs.





5. Shaving makes your hair grow in thicker and darker.



When hair grows, it forms a tapered end. When you shave it, you cut it off at the thickest, darkest part, so the remaining stubble does look thicker and darker. But it’s not. The growth rate is unaffected, and if you let it grow, it will be the same color and texture as before.





6. Sugar makes you hyper.



Actually, it doesn’t. Studies show that when parents were told that their children had been given sugar, they believed that the kids were more hyper — even when they were only given placebos. The correlation might come from the fact that sugary treats are often eaten at parties, where kids are more excited to begin with.





7. MSG gives you headaches.



Technically, the jury’s still out on this, but there’s no scientific data to support it. All evidence is anecdotal at this point.





8. Glass is a liquid.



Glass is actually an amorphous solid, not a supercooled liquid. Old windows that are thicker at the bottom? They were just poorly made.





9. Sushi means “raw fish.”



It actually translates to “sour tasting,” and refers to the rice, not the fish.





10. Undercover police officers are required to identify themselves.



This myth was actually created by Hollywood. Undercover cops don’t have to tell you who they are, so don’t do anything shady.





11. The monster is named Frankenstein.



The name “Frankenstein” refers to the doctor who created the monster in Mary Shelley’s famous horror novel. His name is Victor Frankenstein. The creature he creates out of body parts never has a name.





12. Wet hair makes you sick.



Wrong again. External temperatures have no effect on your body’s resistance to germs. Although having wet hair in the cold is certainly uncomfortable, it won’t necessarily make you sick.





13. Cold weather makes you sick.



Viruses travel more easily through cold air, which holds less moisture. That’s why people are more likely to fall ill in the winter. But you’re more likely to catch a cold while cooped up inside with germy people than you are outside in the snow.





14. Alcohol keeps you warm.



It makes you feel warm because it dilates your blood vessels, giving your face a warm, flushed feeling. But it also drops your core temperature, actually making you colder. If you feel warm, it’s because your surroundings feel warmer compared to your cooling body.





15. The moon has a dark side.



The same side of the moon always faces the Earth, which is why its surface looks the same each night. The “dark” side is the same color, but it’s just in shadow. “Dark” refers to the fact that the sun doesn’t shine on it.





16. Caffeine dehydrates you.



Caffeine does have a slight diuretic effect (as in, it makes you pee), but a cup of coffee won’t dry you out. That’s because it’s mostly water — which is also why it makes you have to pee.





17. Different sides of your brain do different things.



You’ve probably heard the whole “left-brain, right-brain” thing, but the brain is not so clean and organized. There’s no real distinction, but it seems that skills come from various places. Any part of the brain can contribute to any activity.





18. Dogs sweat through their tongues.



This is more of a misunderstanding. Dogs do regulate their temperature by panting, but it’s not sweat. Dogs actually sweat from their paw pads.





19. The iron maiden was a medieval torture device.



As much as we all love it, this thing never existed in the Middle Ages. It was actually invented as a showpiece in the 18th century to shock circus audiences. Think of them as the bogus Internet rumors of the 1700s.





20. Puritans wore black with big collars and buckled hats.



They actually dressed just like anyone else in late Elizabethan times, with a full range of colors depending on the current fashion. The somber black wardrobe was invented later.





21. Salt makes water boil faster.



People swear by this, but it’s actually a scientific impossibility. Salt raises the boiling point of water, which means that adding salt actually makes water take longer to boil.





22. You have to wait 24 hours to report a missing person.



If someone you know is missing, don’t wait a full day! This dangerous rumor is very false. You can report someone missing at any point.





23. Vaccines cause autism.



No, no, no they don’t. This myth became an issue due to some faulty, manipulated research. The doctor who fabricated the study even had his medical license revoked. Please vaccinate your kids. Because you know what’s way worse than autism? Polio.




(via List25)



Now that you’re more educated, it’s time to spread the truth and get rid of these misconceptions!



These Science Facts Will Blow Your Mind All Over The Place


Second Earths? A country bigger than Pluto? Disturbing koala anatomy? Your mind is about to expand with these 22 crazy facts.




There are planets without suns.



Rogue planets (also known as interstellar, nomad, free-floating, and orphan planets) are planets that float around in space unattached to any solar system.




There used to be enormous dragonflies.



The Meganeurae that buzzed around 300 million years ago were roughly the size of seagulls, with wingspans measuring up to 65 centimeters. Insects can’t normally get this large, so scientists are still figuring out how this one did.




The days used to be shorter millions of years ago, and it’s because of the Moon.



Because of the changing distance between our planet and the Moon, the Earth’s rotation is slowing. It used to spin much faster, which caused days to be shorter. There were probably about 385 days in a year back then, with each day lasting less than 23 hours. And yes, there’s geological evidence to back that up.




Weed helped us discover a whole new bodily system.



The endocannabinoid system exists in the human brain, and THC targets it. This system affects things like mood and appetite, which explains a lot.




Many oranges are artificially orange.



Varieties of oranges grown around the equator are actually green, even when completely ripe. But since consumers like their oranges to be orange, the fruits are exposed to ethylene gas, which is produced when fruits ripen. This breaks down chlorophyll and causes the fruit to express its orange pigment.




Fire whirls are a lot like water spouts.



Spiraling winds can pick up flames as well as water, but the result of that is a burning tornado instead of a manageable geyser.




A moon actually holds the record for tallest cliff.



The highest cliff, called Verona Rupes, is located on Uranus’ moon Miranda, and is estimated to be five to ten kilometers tall, which is about ten times the depth of the Grand Canyon. Because of Miranda’s low gravity, it would take a full 12 minutes to fall to the bottom.




An asteroid doesn’t have to hit a planet to cause massive damage.



In 1908, an asteroid slammed into Earth’s atmosphere over central Russia. It broke apart at 28,000 feet, but its shock wave carried the energy of about 150 Hiroshima bombs. It destroyed 800 square miles of Siberian forest.




All the planets in the solar system can fit in the distance between us and the Moon.




The collective diameters of the planets in our solar system are equivalent to about 233,865 miles, which is a lot. To get to the Moon, you’d have to travel 239,200 miles, which is even more.






The Mediterranean Sea almost dried up at one point.



About 5.3 million years ago, the Mediterranean was completely cut off from the other oceans after some tectonic shifts. As a result, it began to evaporate. But when the Strait of Gibraltar opened up, the Atlantic poured into the Mediterranean basin in a cataclysmic event called the Zanclean Flood.




The atmosphere around the sun is hotter than the sun itself.



The sun’s atmosphere, or corona, is about 600 times hotter than the surface of the sun. We’re still trying to figure out why.




It can “rain” animals.



We’ve talked about this before, but animals can actually fall from the sky. The leading theory is that animals get sucked up by waterspouts and dumped elsewhere. This image shows a fish storm that took place in Singapore in 1861.




Earth shares an orbit.



Earth follows an object named 2010 TK7 around the sun on the same orbital path. This object is known as a “trojan,” and is, to our knowledge, the only one circling alongside the Earth. It’s not a moon, because a moon would orbit the planet, not the sun.




There is a lake that almost constantly experiences lightning.



Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela deals with lightning all the time. We don’t know why, but it seems like the air currents combined with local topography welcome a lot of thunderstorms.




There is an object in our solar system that looks like this.



This oblong dwarf planet, seen here in three views, is named Haumea, and it gets its shape because of how quickly it spins. The rapid spinning causes the actual planet to become distorted.




Koalas are freaky.



Male koalas have two penises, and females have three vaginas. You know, just in case.




Russia is bigger than Pluto.



Russia takes up 6.6 million square miles, while Pluto only takes up 6.4 million. You could basically wrap Russia around Pluto with a little land to spare.




Lobsters live for a very long time.



Lobsters die from exhaustion during molting, getting eaten, or being injured. They can live to be about 70 without showing signs of aging, and can seemingly go on forever as long as those three factors don’t come into play. Lobsters might be vampires.




You can measure lightning’s power in relation to toast.



There’s enough power in a single bolt of lightning to toast 100,000 pieces of bread.




There’s a mysterious hole in Minnesota.



There

Wikimedia Commons




The waterfall at Devil’s Kettle flows into a deep hole in the rock below, but then where does it go? No one knows.




There was almost another Earth.



Gliese 581c was considered to be a “second Earth” for a while, but recent findings suggest that it wouldn’t be habitable by humans.




Splenda almost wasn’t.



Sucralose, the main chemical in Splenda, was discovered when a scientist told his colleague to “test this chemical.” The second scientist heard “taste” rather than “test,” and the rest is history. He was also extremely lucky it was just sucralose and not something of the deadly variety.



(via BuzzFeed)



Armed with this useless knowledge, you’ll be ready to win every game of trivia that crosses your path.




For more science facts, check these out:




These 15 Unbelievable Facts Sound Crazy, But They're Totally True


Who doesn’t love a good factoid? As it turns out, we’re most likely to retain a fact if it is introduced with little or no context. After all, when you’re bored out of your mind at a baseball game and your friend randomly tells you that the human head weighs 11 pounds, you’re going to remember that.


After you take in these 15 completely random facts, you’ll leave here a smarter person. You can thank us later.




1. Human beings can (likely) survive 90 seconds in the vacuum of space.




No need to give this one a go for yourself. Just trust us.






2. Scientists in Mexico discovered a way to turn tequila into diamonds.




No one knows if these studies are ongoing, or if the researchers called it quits after making their millions.






3. Wasps have destroyed two planes and killed over 200 people.



Crashes in 1980 and 1996 were directly linked to wasp nests. And here you thought your fear of wasps was irrational!




4. A single tree can make up an entire forest.



The aspen trees in Fishlake National Forest, Utah, all share the same root system, making them the heaviest organism known to man. But if one falls, do they all fall? And what if no one hears it?




5. Speaking of trees, it takes 27,000 trees to supply the world with ample toilet paper.



Those trees are serving a greater purpose.




6. Roughly 24 rabbits in the Australian wild mated and produced 10 billion offspring over several decades.



They were originally released into the wild in the mid-1800s for sport, but quickly became an invasive species. That was a mistake.




7. Penguins can drink salt water.



Their supraorbital gland separates the salt from the water. If only we could do that…




8. Not swinging your arms during a walk gives you a better workout.



Keeping your arms still increases the effort it takes to walk. It has the same effect as walking 20% faster.




9. A teaspoon of matter from a neutron star weighs more than Mt. Everest.



Where can you find a spoon that can hold part of a neutron star? That’s a question for a different day.




10. A Sao Paulo prison uses geese as an alarm system.



The geese are trained to alert guards of inmate violence and breakouts.




11. If you stacked every Oreo ever produced, it would stretch to the moon and back five times over.



That sounds like a complete waste of Oreos.




12. Your brain uses 20 percent of the calories and oxygen you take in on a daily basis.



You just burned a nanocalorie by reading this. Good job!




13. Everyone has their own unique smell…except for twins.



It’s still not okay to go around smelling people, though.




14. The first thing to ever have a barcode was a pack of Wrigley’s gum.




Mr. Wrigley was also one of the first gum aficionados to add mint flavoring. Well played.






15. If you have frequent dreams, this might mean you have a higher IQ.




I bet you didn’t know that, smarty-pants.





(via Unbelievable Facts)


Now you have 15 more random facts to add to your conversation-killing arsenal. Dropping these facts may not make you the most popular, but you can now rest assured that you are the king or queen of useless knowledge.