• 4 months ago
Certaines découvertes accidentelles se sont avérées valoir des millions. Du Velcro au Play-Doh, en passant par une ville souterraine en Turquie découverte dans un sous-sol, le monde est rempli de trésors surprenants qui attendent d'être découverts. Rejoignez-nous alors que nous plongeons dans les histoires fascinantes derrière ces trouvailles accidentelles, chacune témoignant de l'ingéniosité humaine et des détours inattendus du destin. Préparez-vous à être émerveillé par les incroyables voyages de découverte qui ont façonné notre monde de manière que nous n'avons jamais pu imaginer. Qui sait - peut-être votre propre grande découverte vous attend-elle quelque part à proximité ? Animation créée par Sympa.
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Category

😹
Fun
Transcript
00:00 The biggest accidental discovery I've made in my life was a 10-euro bill found in my old winter jacket.
00:07 Some people are more fortunate, however.
00:10 They discover underground cities dating back several centuries,
00:13 where they make inventions that turn them into millionaires.
00:16 Velcro was born from a simple walk in the forest.
00:20 Kellogg's corn flakes were inspired by a broken tooth,
00:24 and the Play-Doh paw saved a commercial empire from bankruptcy by pure chance.
00:29 In 1998, electrician John Williams made a strange discovery
00:34 that looked like an electric plug emerging from the ground.
00:37 While digging around, he noticed that it was embedded in a small rock.
00:42 This discovery took place in a rural area of North America,
00:45 far from any urban or industrial area, any airport, or any electrical installation.
00:51 This electronic part embedded in a solid block of granite
00:55 was named "Enigmalite" and was valued at $500,000.
01:00 Some scientists are skeptical of its authenticity,
01:03 considering it more like a cannula than an artifact left by extraterrestrial visitors,
01:08 as Williams claims.
01:10 However, the discoverer of this rock is determined to prove that it is indeed a technological relic,
01:15 perhaps even a real one.
01:18 If it is not a cannula, this small discovery could be a proof
01:22 that humans, or another civilization of the past,
01:25 were much more advanced than we had imagined.
01:28 They could have found a way to generate electricity long before humans in the 19th century.
01:34 Williams invited scientists to examine his discovery
01:37 without damaging the rock to determine its true nature,
01:40 but no one volunteered.
01:43 Williams consulted an engineer and a geologist,
01:46 who both confirmed that there was no trace of glue on the electronic component.
01:50 It was not welded either,
01:52 indicating that it is as old as the rock itself,
01:55 dating back to about 100,000 years, according to a geological analysis.
01:59 Dr. John Kellogg had a philosophy based on a biological way of life,
02:04 including regular exercise, massages, a lot of water,
02:08 abandonment of bad habits, little caffeine, and no meat at all.
02:13 At the end of the 19th century, he took over the management of a health institute in Michigan.
02:18 He one day made a mixture of flour, oats, and cornstarch.
02:23 Convinced that cooking whole grains at high temperature would make them more digestible and healthier,
02:28 he cooked the mixture twice.
02:30 Initially, he made biscuits out of it, but a patient broke his teeth on it.
02:35 Then, he decided to break them into small pieces.
02:39 It is difficult to determine exactly how Kellogg's cornflakes were born,
02:44 because there are many versions of the story.
02:47 Kellogg's wife, Ella, and her brother, Will,
02:51 claim to have played a role in the creation of the famous flakes,
02:55 just like several other family members and staff of the establishment.
02:59 The legend of the company would say that one day in 1888,
03:03 wheat-based cereal dough was left aside for too long,
03:07 fermenting during the process.
03:09 When it was finely spread, the slightly moldy dough turned into these perfect,
03:14 large and thin flakes, which became crispy and delicious in the oven.
03:19 Over the years, Will Kellogg continued to modify the recipe,
03:23 and realized that corn, and not wheat,
03:26 produced even more crispy and tasty flakes.
03:29 His brand, Kellogg's Cornflakes, became a company worth several billion dollars.
03:35 One day, the Swiss engineer, George de Mestral, went for a walk with his dog,
03:40 and came back with a concept that would later prove to be revolutionary.
03:43 On his way back from the forest, de Mestral noticed that his pants and the fur of his dog
03:48 were covered with small dots of xanthium.
03:51 He examined the beards under a microscope,
03:54 and noticed that they resembled tiny hooks
03:57 that were attached to the loops of the clothes and the fur.
04:00 Determined to reproduce this natural technology,
04:03 he began to design an extremely solid attachment system,
04:07 with multiple practical applications.
04:09 After several years of research and experimentation with different materials,
04:13 he finally opted for nylon.
04:16 In addition, he had to develop a special weaving profession
04:19 capable of weaving fibers in the right sizes, shapes and densities.
04:24 After 14 years of hard work,
04:26 de Mestral finally presented the world with the Velcro,
04:29 derived from the words "velour" and "crochet".
04:32 Although he hoped that his invention would replace lightning fastener,
04:36 the fashion industry initially perceived it as low-end and unattractive.
04:41 However, NASA recognized its potential
04:43 and began to use it in space suits and astronauts' helmets in the 1960s.
04:49 Today, the Velcro is omnipresent,
04:52 with a multitude of applications,
04:54 from shoes to toys, through the cushions of airplane seats.
04:58 Until the middle of the 20th century,
05:00 coal heating was the norm in most homes,
05:04 leaving the sewage that was encrusted everywhere in the house,
05:07 especially on wallpaper.
05:09 Cutol Products was the main supplier of cleaners for wallpaper at the time.
05:14 However, in the 1950s,
05:17 more and more people adopted gas, oil and electricity as heating sources,
05:23 which largely solved the problem of all this sewage.
05:26 The owner of Cutol Products desperately tried to save his company.
05:31 Meanwhile, his beautiful sister, who was a kindergarten teacher,
05:35 read that a cleaner for wallpaper could be used to make decorations.
05:40 Traditional modeling clay was too difficult to handle for her students.
05:44 That's how she decided to experiment with this material.
05:48 And it worked very well.
05:51 She shared her discovery with her loved ones
05:53 and proposed a name for this new product.
05:56 Play Dove.
05:57 With Cutol on the verge of bankruptcy,
06:00 it was the perfect opportunity for a conversion.
06:03 Quickly, large stores like Macy's and Marshall Field
06:06 showed interest in this new toy and began to distribute it.
06:10 At first, Play Dove only existed in white,
06:13 but it was quickly declined to red, blue and yellow.
06:18 They made several modifications to the original recipe,
06:21 but the basic composition remains largely the same as that used to clean the wallpaper.
06:26 An urban legend says that if you take all the clay to model Play Dove never produced
06:30 and make it pass through their machine,
06:32 you will get a snake long enough to wrap the planet 300 times.
06:37 A Turk was renovating his house when he knocked down a block of his cellar by force.
06:42 To his great surprise, he discovered a hidden tunnel behind the wall
06:46 that led to an old underground city.
06:48 This tunnel led to other passages, rooms and rooms.
06:53 It turned out to be an entire 18-story underground complex,
06:57 devoid of inhabitants and abandoned for a long time.
07:00 It was the city of Derinkuyu,
07:02 designed thousands of years ago to accommodate up to 20,000 people.
07:07 Anyone who built it has shown great mastery,
07:09 because digging tunnels in this soft rock presents considerable risk of collapse.
07:15 None of the floors of Derinkuyu ever collapsed.
07:18 The city was equipped with a sophisticated ventilation system,
07:21 including more than 15,000 ventilation shafts.
07:24 The upper levels benefited from better ventilation
07:27 and were reserved for bedrooms and living spaces.
07:31 The lower levels were mainly used for storage,
07:34 but also contained manholes.
07:37 Between the two were spaces dedicated to cattle, a school, a convent and small churches.
07:43 John Martin, a professor of silviculture,
07:46 was walking one night in a Wisconsin forest.
07:49 He used a UV flashlight to spot lichens,
07:53 mushrooms, plants and frogs that shone under this light.
07:58 Suddenly, he heard a flying squirrel cooing near a bird feeder.
08:03 He turned his flashlight on the animal and saw it tinted in pink.
08:08 The professor discussed this with his colleague,
08:10 and they decided to go deeper into their research.
08:13 They examined the skins of flying squirrels kept in museums
08:16 to determine if this pink glow was a common phenomenon.
08:20 It turned out that almost all the flying squirrel specimens they examined
08:23 showed this fluorescence.
08:26 However, ordinary squirrels showed none.
08:30 Other fluorescent animals, such as macaws and chameleons,
08:34 emit a blue glow under the UV light.
08:37 The only other mammals with a fluorescent fur
08:40 are about twenty species of opossum.
08:43 They inhabit various ecosystems and have different diets.
08:47 The only thing they have in common with flying squirrels is that they are nocturnal,
08:51 while other squirrels prefer daylight.
08:55 It is possible that pink glow is a function
08:58 linked to the perception and night-time spotting of flying squirrels,
09:02 especially in cold and snowy environments where UV light is more abundant.
09:07 Another hypothesis is that it could be used to attract potential partners
09:11 in the form of a fluorescent animal.
09:14 It is also possible that it is a form of mimicry.
09:18 [MUSIC]

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