What keeps a bullet on a
straight course?
In the Old West a "straight shooter"
was an honest person you could rely on. Metaphorically,
shooting straight meant that the person was like a bullet's
path: true, not crooked. But just what was it that
enabled a bullet to travel in a straight line?
The bullets coming out of the first muskets were
literally scattershot. The unevenly shaped lead balls
bounced against the inside of the barrel as they were
launched and could easily veer off. Gunmakers solved the
problem by improving the fit between bullet and barrel
and by placing spiral grooves inside the barrel to spin
the bullet as it emerged.
Spinning, like a gyroscope, corrects irregularities in an
object's flight path. Finally, in the mid-19th century,
bullets were aerodynamically redesigned. They were made
longer, ending in the familiar conical tip which puts the
bullet on the straight and narrow.
(Source: READER'S DIGEST HOW IN THE WORLD)
How were Popsicles invented?
Until 1905 the world had no Popsicles. It
was in that year that 11-year old Frank Epperson of
Oakland, California invented the popular treat by
accident.
He had mixed up some powdered soda pop, but he left the
cup outside with the stirring stick still in it. That
night there was a record frost. When Frank went outside
the next morning, there was his cup with the soda pop
frozen solid. He grabbed the stick and the frozen pop
came out of the cup in one piece. Eighteen years later
Epperson started selling "Eppsicles."
The Eppsicle was eventually called the Popsicle, a
trademarked name for what is also known as an ice pop.
Today they are sold on thin hardwood sticks, and they
have evolved into hundreds of varieties including
chocolate dipped ice cream pops (Creamsicles), with or
without sprinkles.
More about the invention of the Popsicle:
http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/Geek/geek990624.html
More about popsicles and other frozen treats:
http://www.familyfun.com/content/aug97/object.html
http://www2.mybc.com/aroundtown/food/columns/archives/1999/aug/garber_12.html
More Cool Facts about food:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/11/03.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/12/02.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/11/26.html
How did "pipe down"
come to mean, "be quiet?"
The tone of this expression puts it
somewhere between "please lower your voice" and
"shut your mouth!" But the words in it don't
place it anywhere that's at all obvious. What pipe? Where?
Why? Who's smoking it?
The reality is that pipe down is yet another expression
that comes from the days of sailing ships. The "pipe"
in question was a whistle used by the boatswain, a petty
officer--sort of a sergeant--who supervised a work crew
on deck. When he blew "pipe down" his men were
free to go below. Once they went below, it was quiet on
deck. And that's the condition to which you aspire when
you tell someone to pipe down. If they don't respond,
throw them overboard.
(Source: WHO PUT THE BUTTER IN BUTTERFLY? by David
Feldman)
What's the slowest pulsar
discovered so far?
A pulsar is a spinning neutron star that
casts a tight beam of electromagnetic energy around the
Galaxy like a searchlight. Until recently, it was thought
that in order to create the beam of energy a pulsar had
to spin at least several times each second. But a newly
discovered pulsar, called PSR J2144-3933 spins only once
every 8.51 seconds, making it the slowest pulsar known.
Pulsars are thought to generate their energy beams
through the reactions of electrons and positrons (anti-electrons)
produced by the star's gigantic magnetic field.
But PSR J2144-3933 is not spinning fast enough to make an
energy beam by that process, according to the scientists.
Its energy source remains unknown, and the scientists
continue to watch it carefully, hoping for more clues.
More about PSR J2144-3933:
http://explorezone.com/archives/99_08/26_slow_pulsar.htm
http://www.spaceviews.com/1999/08/29b.html
More Cool Facts about neutron stars:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/02/05.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/06/04.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/08/25.html
How are enormously heavy steel
ships able to float?
From the way they look in the water, I'd
say "with plenty of effort." They appear to
defy basic laws of nature. But in fact, they're obeying a
law of nature, buoyancy, which Greek mathematician
Archimedes reportedly discovered while taking a bath.
The trick in building ships so that they don't go
straight to the bottom is to get the shape right. The
vessel has to be configured so that it will be buoyant,
displacing a volume of water weighing as much as it does.
In other words, if an amount of steel equal to that in a
giant tanker were rolled into a compact ball and dropped
into the sea, bye, bye ball. But if the metal is spread
out over a thousand feet, the ship can cross the ocean.
(Source: READER'S DIGEST HOW IN THE WORLD)
Where is the coldest place on
Earth?
The coldest natural outdoor temperature
ever recorded (as of January, 2000) was at Russia's
Vostock Station in Antarctica. In 1997 the temperature
there fell to -91 degrees Celsius (-132 degrees F). At
this temperature, steel becomes so brittle it shatters
easily.
Vostok Station is located in the middle of a vast expanse
of uninterrupted ice, on a high plateau about 780 miles (1260
km) from the South Pole. The ice at Vostok is about 3700
meters thick (12,100 feet) and the surface elevation is
3488 meters (11,444 feet).
Vostok Station is not only the coldest place on Earth, it
is also one of the driest. Because the air is so cold, it
can hold very little moisture. The air's absolute
humidity at Vostok is lower than that of the Sahara
Desert.
More about Antarctica, by a scientist who spent a
year at the South Pole:
http://ast.leeds.ac.uk/haverah/spaseman/index.shtml
More Cool Facts about Antarctica:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/07/06.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/08/10.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/03/31.html
Who invented the Internet and why?
Imagine someone absent-mindedly going to
check their email one day, then suddenly realizing that
it hadn't yet been invented.
Actually it would have been more appropriate if this
mythical person had wanted to download Quake or Doom,
because it was the U.S. Department of Defense that first
ventured into cyberspace.
It began in 1969 with ARPAnet, a small, restricted
computer network that allowed scientists doing Pentagon
research to communicate. In the early 80's military
research was shifted to another network and the National
Science Foundation took over the old ARPA technology and
opened it to the public. At first, only the techies
showed up on line. Gradually schools connected. Then, as
PC's proliferated, public online services such as
CompuServe were started. The point and click Web, with
graphics, arrived in the early 90s.
(Source: THE WORLD ALMANAC AND BOOK OF FACTS)
Where is the largest temperate
rain forest?
The largest unbroken temperate rain
forest in the world is the Tongass in southeast Alaska.
It is 17 million acres of magnificent wilderness with
abundant birds, bears, and other life. How wild is it?
Surrounded by the Tongass, the city of Juneau (Alaska's
capital) is accessible by ferries or by air, but not by
roads.
The Tongass was extensively logged until the early 1990s,
when the lumber mills began to shut down. Today, almost
the entire region is protected from further development
or exploitation, and many groups act to further that
protection.
Temperate rain forests (those outside the tropics) look
different than tropical rain forests. Dominated by
coniferous trees, they grow more slowly but have a larger
biomass (total mass of living matter) than tropical rain
forests.
More about the Tongass:
http://www.fs.fed.us/r10/tongass/
http://www.gorp.com/gorp/resource/US_National_Forest/ak_tonga
Resource pages for protection of the Tongass:
http://www.tongass.com/
http://www.ptialaska.net/~tongass/
More Cool Facts about forests:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/04/30.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/08/27.html
Who made the first marbles?
Marbles have been used for games since
the times of the Egyptian Pharaohs, when they were made
out of fired clay. Clay marbles were also made by Native
Americans, who also used round stones and nuts for their
games.
The first glass marbles were made in Venice, Italy around
900 AD. Italian marbles were also made out of polished
marble and other kinds of stone around the same time.
These stone and glass marbles were used throughout Europe
for hundreds of years.
Modern glass marbles did not appear until about 1860,
when they were made in Germany. Around 1905, machine-made
marbles were first sold in the United States, and their
higher quality seriously impacted the European handmade
marble marketplace. Today, though, the very best marbles
are still made by hand, using secret methods.
More about marble history and collecting:
http://www.blocksite.com/mcc/faq.htm
Another Cool Fact about marbles:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/09/23.html
Marble is a Cool Word:
http://www.cool-word.com/archive/1999/09/23.html
Does a person's life really flash
before them when they're dying?
What might there be about the threat of
death that inspires a sudden indulgence in autobiography?
Wouldn't the mind be fixed on other things, such as,
"How the heck can I get out of here?" Yet so
many people have described this phenomenon--
which makes it real enough--that scientists have been
compelled to try to explain it.
Two theories have been proposed. The first holds that a
threat
as traumatic as that of imminent demise from any cause,
not just drowning, automatically triggers the release of
memories that one always retains but usually doesn't
recall. The other explanation points to hardware
breakdown. Cutting the flow of oxygen to the brain makes
its electrical impulses go haywire, catapulting long-stored
memories into one's consciousness helter skelter. Either
way, I prefer to confine my own life review to whatever a
glass of Chardonnay might pry from my temporal lobes.
(Source: READER'S DIGEST DID YOU KNOW?)
What's the closest spacecraft fly-by
so far?
On July 28, 1999 the spacecraft Deep
Space 1 (DS1) passed within ten kilometers (six miles) of
a tiny Asteroid called 9969 Braille, in the closest non-impact
fly-by to date of a spacecraft past any celestial object.
Moving at a relative speed of 15.5 kilometers per second
(nearly 35,000 miles/hour), DS1 zoomed past Braille more
than 50 times faster than the speed of a commercial jet,
and twice as fast as the Space Shuttle.
Deep Space 1 is part of NASA's New Millennium Program, a
group of missions designed to test and refine new space
technologies. DS1 tests twelve new inventions, including
a revolutionary ion propulsion system and a sophisticated
software navigation system.
The official DS1 web site:
http://nmp.jpl.nasa.gov/ds1/
The New Millennium Program:
http://nmp.jpl.nasa.gov/
More Cool Facts about Deep Space 1:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/12/08.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/08/06.html
What's the largest visible light
telescope?
Until 1993, the largest light telescope
in the world was the 200-inch (5-meter) Hale Telescope at
the top of Mt. Palomar in southern California. With its
huge single-piece glass mirror, it was a tremendous feat
of engineering.
In 1993, the gigantic 400-inch (ten-meter) Keck I
Telescope was completed. At the top of Hawaii's dormant
Mauna Kea volcano, it is eight stories tall and weighs
300 tons. In 1996 its twin, the Keck II, was brought
online.
Instead of a single continuous mirror, each Keck
Telescope has thirty-six thin hexagonal segments that can
be individually aligned for maximum accuracy. With its
huge collecting area, each Keck can gather forty thousand
times as much light as the telescope that Galileo used.
The twin Keck Telescopes:
http://www2.keck.hawaii.edu:3636/realpublic/gen_info/gen_info.html
More Cool Facts about telescopes and other seeing
instruments:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/04/13.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/11/17.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/08/03.html
Exactly what was the forbidden
fruit in the Garden of Eden?
If the apple industry had hired the best
public relations person in history, they never could have
gotten the kind of attention they have received for free
from the Biblical story of the Garden of Eden and the
forbidden fruit. It's bad publicity, you say? Publicity
is publicity. The thing to is to be mentioned--often,
everywhere.
But where does it say that the fruit was an apple? Not in
any Bible I know about. So many people think it was an
apple, but
the text never identifies the fruit. Maybe it was a
tangelo. (The Koran says it was a banana.)
Come to think of it, maybe the apple industry did get in
there early on with a juicy publicity campaign. Planting
the seeds, so to speak.
(Source: PANATI'S BROWSER'S BOOK OF BEGINNINGS)
How do time release capsules work?
Time release capsules, invented in the
1940s, hardly compare in importance to penicillin, the
greatest medical advance of that decade. Yet the capsules
did represent a revolution in terms of comfort and
convenience. (Or would you prefer to wake up every hour
during the night to pop pills in installments?)
The way the capsules work is amazingly simple. In effect,
you are swallowing a group of small medicinal time bombs--close
to a thousand of them in some capsules--with "fuses"
set for different times. Those fuses are created by the
varying thickness' of a wax-like coating over the
medication which determines how soon your digestive
system can get at the medicine inside each pellet. The
thin-skinned ones go to work almost right away, while the
ones with the heavier coatings hang around, waiting for
that coating to dissolve. All you have to do is swallow
the capsule. Bombs away!
(Source: HOW DO THEY DO THAT? by Caroline Sutton)
Why hasn't the Earth's interior
cooled after more than 4 billion years?
Wouldn't you think that after 4 billion
plus years of letting off steam via volcanoes, geysers,
and other geological temper tantrums, Mother Earth would
cool it? Yet after all that time it's still over 3,200
degrees F. down below.
The main reason for the retention of all that heat is the
superb insulation, plain old rock, that's keeping it in.
Another is that the heat process is being fueled by the
energy emitted by the decay of radioactive material way
down below-- in effect, a battery with one heck of a long
life. And in the scheme of things, volcanoes and such
release a miniscule amount of the planet's inner heat.
They don't dissipate any more of it than your perpetually
angry aunt Sadie dispels her enormous reserves of heat
every time she blows her stack.
(Source: WHY THINGS ARE & WHY THEY AREN'T by Joel
Achenbach)
Where's the largest pipe organ in
the world?
Built between 1929 and 1932, the largest
pipe organ in the world is the Atlantic City Convention
Hall Organ, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA. According
to the Guinness Book of World Records, it is also the
largest and loudest musical instrument ever constructed.
The monster music maker has 336 stops (tuned sets of
pipes that form musical voice settings), and is powered
by blowers totaling more than 600 horsepower. The exact
number of pipes is not known; the quoted figure is 33,112
but some experts estimate the number at more than 32,000.
The main playing console, which is surrounded by art-deco
columns with stylized flames on top, boasts seven
keyboards and rank upon rank of stop controls. There are
six large foot pedals and dozens of small ones. The pipes
are located in chambers that fully surround the
auditorium, so the audience is completely immersed in the
musical experience.
The Atlantic City Convention Hall Organ Society:
http://www.acchos.org/
Much more about pipe organs:
http://nersp.nerdc.ufl.edu/~bodinew/index.html
http://www3.sympatico.ca/billinger/organ/organ.htm
Another Cool Fact about an extreme musical instrument:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/06/22.html
What kind of laser makes the
cleanest cut?
The kind of laser cutter that causes the
smallest amount of damage to the material surrounding the
target is the femtosecond laser, developed in 1997 by a
team at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory.
The secret to the clean cuts of the femtosecond laser is
the extremely short duration of its light pulses -- 50 to
100 femtoseconds (a femtosecond is one quadrillionth of a
second).
Because the pulse of light is so short, it only removes
one layer of atoms with each pulse. These atoms are
almost instantly vaporized and blown free of the target
zone. By the time they are gone, the laser pulse is over
and no further heat is added.
The femtosecond laser has applications ranging from
cutting steel to performing delicate microsurgery
operations. It was originally developed for use in
disassembling nuclear weapon components, which must be
done very carefully and precisely.
More about the femtosecond laser:
http://www.llnl.gov/str/Stuart.html
A research group in Germany is developing new
applications:
http://wwwa.kip.uni-heidelberg.de/AG_Bille/Projekt/femto.html
More Cool Facts about lasers:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/10/16.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/11/18.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/2000/03/22.html
Why do we call people who work
off-staff "freelancers?"
The cynics among freelancers will tell
you that they are called that because many clients expect
them to work practically for free. They are also free to
do without employee benefits such as vacations and
medical coverage. On the other hand, they do get to set
their own hours, write off an espresso and a croissant
with a friend as a business expense, and work at home in
their underwear
The term originated in the Middle Ages to describe a
mercenary knight whose lance was for hire. He was free of
any attachment to a particular lord and could be employed
on a project-by-project basis--assault a castle, rescue a
damsel, the usual stuff. Eventually the term was applied
to anyone who was paid by the project or the piece.
(Source: A BROWSER'S DICTIONARY by John Ciardi)
FAST FACTS:
The custom of playing tricks on people on
April 1 began in France after a new calendar was
instituted in the 16th century. Previously, the New Year
had been celebrated April 1, but the new calendar
switched it to the familiar January 1.
Out of habit, many people continued to observe April 1 as
the
beginning of the year. They were known as "April
fools," and eventually the custom arose of playing
tricks on that day.
The French call victims of April Fools pranks "April
fish." Maybe that's because they go for the bait.
(Source: THE WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA)
Why does a candle flame have
different zones?
Take a close look at a candle flame. How
many different zones does it have? From the wick outward
and upward, first there is a transparent zone, then
usually a blue zone, then a yellow zone, and possibly a
short red one. Sometimes there is even a black zone after
that one.
The transparent zone nearest the wick is where wax vapor
steadily streams off the wick. There isn't enough oxygen
in that zone for it to burn, because the steady stream of
vapor keeps it out. But something else important happens
here: the heat from the burning part of the flame starts
breaking up the chains of carbon atoms in the wax. The
long chains of carbon atoms immediately condense into
extremely tiny particles of soot, which are carried into
the main flame.
The blue zone is colored by the burning of a particular
kind of molecular fragment called diatomic carbon (C2).
The yellow zone is colored by the burning of the soot
particles. If not all the soot burns, then the red zone
forms from cooling soot particles, and you might even see
the black zone which is smoke (large soot particles) in
the process of condensing.
A more detailed explanation:
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/chem99/chem99454.htm
More about soot and candle flames:
http://www.fiscorp.net/iaq/rscience.html
More Cool Facts about fire:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/12/01.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/09/14.html
What's the world's largest herb?
An herb is a vascular plant (a plant with
water-carrying vessels) that does not have woody tissue (stem
tissue in which the cells have died but still carry water).
The largest herb in the world is the banana plant (Musa
sapientum), a crop grown in tropical countries around the
world.
Banana plants have leaves up to four meters long (12 feet)
that emerge from an underground corm. The bananas are
formed in a large bunch called a hand that forms on the
end of a sturdy stem. The fruits of domestic bananas do
not contain viable seeds; the plants are reproduced by
dividing the corm or by growing tiny plantlets in
laboratory tissue cultures.
The average American eats 28 pounds (13 kg) of bananas in
a year, more than any other fruit. Worldwide, about 60
million tons of bananas are produced each year. An acre
of banana plants can produce as much as seven tons of
fruit in a year.
More about bananas:
http://www.traidcraft.co.uk/banana1.htm
http://www.fyffes.com/didyouknow.htm
http://www.wellpathways.com/fitness_nutrition/nutrition/5aday/fruits/banana.asp
Did you know bananas can ease muscle cramps?
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/2000/02/15.html
What human bone serves no known
purpose?
Everyone has a bone that serves no
purpose we know of. It's the coccyx [KOK-siks], a small
triangular bone at the very end of the spine.
Millions of years ago, our distant ancestors had tails
that helped them balance while they moved around in the
trees, much like today's tailed monkeys. When they moved
from the trees out onto the grasslands of Africa, our
prehuman ape ancestors began to stand upright, and the
tail diminished to a tiny stump, and then to nothing at
all. But the bone that was in the tail is still with us,
even though there are no muscles attached to it.
Such a left-over of a once-useful organ is called a
vestigial [ves-TIJ-yul] organ. Another organ that may be
vestigial is the appendix, a small extension of the
intestine that may have once helped filter toxins from
our food.
Diagram of the spine, showing the coccyx at the end:
http://reality.sgi.com/sambo/Oobe/CyberAnatomy/HTML/coccyx.html
More about the spinal bones, including the coccyx:
http://homepages.which.net/~ks.burrell/f2/spine.htm
More Cool Facts about bones:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/02/20.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/04/06.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/08/26.html
Is it true that animals are
colorblind?
You may have heard that a bull never
literally "sees red" when the bullfighter waves
a cape in his face. It's the movement of the cape that
provokes. Animals, after all, are colorblind.
Hold on, not so fast. Birds, for instance,
have a marked ability to distinguish colors. They need it
to spot food, such as berries, on the ground. On the
other hand, most creatures of the night--including the
ubiquitous house cat--have little sense of color. But
they're awfully good at picking up movement.
So the next time someone tells you that all animals are
color blind, tell them that it's not such a black and
white proposition.
(Source: READER'S DIGEST, DID YOU KNOW?)
FAST FACTS:
Some believe that the idea of a lucky
four leaf clover goes back to Adam and Eve. It's said
that when Eve was sent from
the Garden of Eden, she took a four leaf clover with her.
The clover may have been lucky but it certainly wasn't as
practical as the fig leaf.
(Source: THE KID'S FUN-FILLED QUESTION AND ANSWER
BOOK)
How was Play-Doh invented?
For more than 40 years kids have been
making monsters, dogs, people, and shapeless blobs out of
Play-Doh, a curiously aromatic stuff that comes in
different colors. Today it's a multi-million dollar
product made by Hasbro, but how did it get started?
It happened in Cincinnati, Ohio in the 1950s, and
involved a young man named Joe McVicker. McVicker's
sister-in-law was a schoolteacher who wanted softer clay
for her young students, who were having trouble molding
the hard, water-based mineral clay that was used in
schools at that time.
McVicker took the request to a biochemist named Tin Liu
at his father's soap and chemical company. Starting with
a soft, gooey substance used to clean wallpaper, Tin Liu
came up with Play-Doh. McVicker marketed the result, and
became a millionaire by the time he was 27. No one seems
to know what happened to Tin Liu, who seldom gets credit
as Play-Doh's actual inventor.
Two slightly different versions of the Play-Doh story:
http://www.yolk.com/magazine/iss1/doh.html
http://www.yippeee.com/what/playdoh.html
Recipes for home-made clay, play-doh, and more:
http://k2.kirtland.cc.mi.us/~balbachl/kidrecip.htm
More Cool Facts about toys and games:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/07/05.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/02/11.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/09/23.html
Why do we tell someone who's
snooty to get off his or her high horse?
I've known some pretty snooty people who
I wouldn't mind seeing fall off a high horse. But this
expression just tells them to get off. So what would they
be doing mounted on this tall nag in the first place?
If you know anything about horses, you're aware that they
come in a pretty wide variety of sizes and shapes.
Clydesdales, for examples, are very big, while Shetland
Ponies are, by comparison, pretty diminutive. At one time,
the size of your horse would have had a lot to do with
your social position.
Knights, for instance, high on the social scale, needed
big horses to hold them and their equipment. Other high-standing
people just liked to sit tall in the saddle, with a
little help from their steed. The expression "get
off your high horse" thus means to come down from
such social pretensions.
(Source: A BROWSER'S DICTIONARY by John Ciardi,)
FAST FACTS:
Your jaw muscle is the most powerful
muscle in your body. Of
course it is, with cell phones it's the one that gets the
biggest workout.
A skunk can propel its spray about 10 feet, but its stink
can go a lot further.
(Source: THE KID'S FUN-FILLED QUESTION AND ANSWER
BOOK)
Why do we say that something that
has matured has "come to a head?"
Feet get no respect. You go to the head
of your class, you're miles ahead of everyone else, and a
good glass of beer has a head on it. But don't get it in
your head that this particular expression--come to a head--refers
directly to your anatomy. Not this time. Not unless you're
a vegetable.
The reference is to the maturing of the very down-to-earth
cabbage. As far back as the Renaissance, people going to
market were anxious to pick up a head or two. Sometimes,
though, farmers had to tell their customers that weather
conditions had held back the growth of the crop. The
still immature plant had not yet fully formed, had not
"come to a head." So there you are: reach
maturity and they compare you
to a cabbage.
(Source: WHY YOU SAY IT by Webb Garrison)
FAST FACTS:
The English language contains only four
words that end in "dous." They are tremendous,
stupendous, hazardous...and..and...if I don't tell you
the last one that would absolutely horrendous.
(Source: OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY)
What are the oldest seeds that
sprouted?
The oldest known viable seeds were found
in 1954 in a lemming burrow in Canada's frigid Yukon. The
burrow, which was buried in silt and sediment, had been
frozen since the last ice age.
The arctic tundra lupine seeds (Lupinus arcticus) were
found with lemming remains that were at least 10,000
years old. When they were placed in favorable conditions,
several seeds sprouted within 48 hours. One of the plants
later bloomed.
Other cases of extremely old seeds that sprouted include
a 3400-year-old bean from the tomb of Tutankhamun and
water lily seeds that were found with a canoe that had
been buried in a bog near Tokyo for more than 3000 years.
A page about the ancient lupine seeds:
http://www.nature.ca/notebooks/english/arclupin.htm
More about Canada's arctic lupine, a beautiful
wildflower:
http://rbcm1.rbcm.gov.bc.ca/nh_papers/nativeplants/lupinus.html
More Cool Facts about very old living things:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/03/31.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1997/07/03.html
What country has the most tornadoes?
The country with the most tornadoes is the
United States, where about 800 twisters touch down every
year. Most of them happen in the central plains states
("Tornado Alley"), where gigantic "supercell"
thunderstorms sweep across the landscape, fed by moisture
from the Gulf Of Mexico colliding with cooler, dryer air
from the Rocky Mountains.
The second place winner for most tornadoes is Australia,
where a few hundred form every year. They also happen
sometimes in the plains of Asia.
Tornadoes can happen in any country that gets
thunderstorms, but they require very special conditions.
A heavy layer of cool, dry air must flow above a layer of
warm, moist air, and there must be a certain twist to the
air currents to start the vortex spinning.
The National Weather Service's page on tornadoes:
http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/NWSTornado/
More Cool Facts about thunderstorms:
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1998/01/07.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/07/26.html
http://www.cool-fact.com/archive/1999/10/11.html
How do airline pilots land in a
fog?
Carefully! Your plane can't pull over to
the side of the road in bad weather, so the pilot had
better be able to find the runway. That's where the
"instrument landing" you may have heard of
comes in.
A bit less than 10 miles from touch down and just under
500 feet altitude, the plane's radar picks up a signal,
the outer marker, that orients the pilot toward the
runway's glide path. This path is defined by two signals.
One keeps the pilot from veering too far to either side,
while the other guides the plane down at the correct
angle. At a height of 200 feet the middle marker signals
the fail-safe point. If the runway lights are still not
visible, you're going back up and on to another airport (and
wherever that may be, you will still wait an hour for
your luggage).
(Source: HOW DO THEY DO THAT? by Caroline Sutton)
FAST FACTS:
The subject of the Mona Lisa, one of
history's most famous paintings, was a Florentine
merchant's wife. Have you ever noticed that she has no
eyebrows? It was customary in Florence in those days to
shave them off.
There are three earlier versions of La Giaconda, the
painting's real name, underneath the top layer. From an
inside source in the Louvre, I have learned that in one
of those versions playful painter Leonardo da Vinci
actually gave his subject not only eyebrows, but a beard,
moustache and sideburns as well.
(Source: 2201 FASCINATING FACTS)
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