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Fun
Transcript
00:00:00Now, there are two types of people – those who love olives and those who absolutely don't.
00:00:06So, olive fans, have you noticed that all olives are canned, and you can't seem to
00:00:11buy fresh ones anywhere?
00:00:13Well, the reason for that is simple – fresh olives have such a disgusting taste that no
00:00:18grocery wants to sell them.
00:00:20Yeah, for real.
00:00:22All these cans and oils and chemicals serve to make them edible.
00:00:26Still doesn't work well enough for anti-olive people.
00:00:29Have you noticed that grocery stores don't have windows?
00:00:33There are several reasons for that.
00:00:34First, they want you to spend more time inside and buy more stuff.
00:00:38For this purpose, they create a different atmosphere, cutting you off from the outside
00:00:43world.
00:00:44For example, you can't see it getting dark or raining outside, and you lose track of
00:00:48time.
00:00:49Kind of like in a casino.
00:00:51But there are other reasons too.
00:00:53For example, having windows would decrease available space for shelves with products.
00:00:58Also, direct sunshine can cause products to go bad faster and make labels fade away.
00:01:05Did you know that H&M, the name of the clothing store, is short for Hennes & Moritz?
00:01:10It's a Swedish company that originally was only selling women's clothes, and so it
00:01:15was called Hennes, which means hers in Swedish.
00:01:18Moritz Wildfors owned a hunting apparel retailer, which was then acquired by Hennes' owner.
00:01:24The store started to sell men's clothes too, and the name of the store changed to
00:01:28Hennes & Moritz, or as we know it, H&M.
00:01:33Now some more about marketing.
00:01:34I bet that whenever and wherever you buy your oranges, they're always in a red mesh bag.
00:01:40You rarely see them lying around without a bag.
00:01:43And it's all for a reason – the color of the bag was chosen carefully.
00:01:47When packed in a red mesh bag, oranges appear more orange, and they seem fresher and more
00:01:53appealing to you.
00:01:54So you're more likely to buy them.
00:01:57Lemons are usually sold in green mesh bags for a similar reason.
00:02:00If you pack them in red, they'll look more orange, and green goes better with yellow,
00:02:05making the lemon stand out.
00:02:07There are so many things I don't understand about the world, and one of them is this.
00:02:12Why do chocolate bars, like Mars or Snickers, have those zigzag waves on the bottom?
00:02:18Turns out, well, not surprisingly, that they appear during the manufacturing process.
00:02:23When a chocolate bar is produced, it lies on a patterned belt of an enrober.
00:02:28This machine coats the bar with melted chocolate and then keeps it at a particular temperature
00:02:32to make it freeze.
00:02:34The reason the belt is patterned and not smooth is to recover excess chocolate.
00:02:39When the bar freezes, the prints stay.
00:02:42Now you've probably noticed that old chocolate can turn whitish on the surface.
00:02:46This happens because, with time, liquid fats contained in the chocolate bar, for example,
00:02:52cocoa butter, start to travel up through the chocolate, crystallizing on top.
00:02:57That's the white powder, also known as fat bloom.
00:03:00It's completely harmless, so don't worry about it.
00:03:03And if you really hate it, well, just ship that chocolate over to me, and I'll dispose
00:03:08of it.
00:03:09Orally.
00:03:10Lollipop sticks have those squared holes in their ends for a reason.
00:03:14When candy is put on a stick, some of it goes into the hole, fixating the sweet part.
00:03:19This way, the candy ball, or whatever shape it is, is less likely to fall off the stick.
00:03:25Egg yolks can be different colors, starting with pale yellow and ending with deep orange.
00:03:31What does it depend on?
00:03:32Nope, not the chicken breed.
00:03:34Those only affect the color of the shell.
00:03:37The color of the yolk depends on a chicken's diet.
00:03:40If its food has more yellow and orange pigments, the yolks will be darker.
00:03:45And yeah, yolks of any color are equally nutritional, so no worries.
00:03:50Since we're talking about farms, look at these barns.
00:03:53What do they have in common?
00:03:54Yep, the color red.
00:03:56And it seems like a trend.
00:03:58There were times before a wide variety of paints became available when people had to
00:04:03make their own paint for their barns.
00:04:05Years ago, farmers were sealing barns with linseed oil, which is orange in color.
00:04:10And to that oil, they also added milk, lime, and rust.
00:04:14Rust was available and handy, and it had the power to get rid of moss and fungi.
00:04:19Together, these ingredients turned the mixture red, and that was used as paint.
00:04:24Nowadays, it's just a tradition many still follow.
00:04:28You've probably noticed those little rubber hairs on car and bike tires.
00:04:33Any special purpose?
00:04:34Well, no.
00:04:35They appear during the tire manufacturing process.
00:04:39Rubber is mixed with carbon black and put into an iron mold.
00:04:42Then it gets spread all over the mold under high air pressure.
00:04:46To make a good tire, the rubber should cover all the surfaces equally.
00:04:50But there's a problem.
00:04:52Air bubbles can form between the mold and the rubber.
00:04:55To make sure it doesn't happen, and help extra air escape, tire molds have little holes
00:05:00all over them.
00:05:01Some rubber gets in there, and once the tire is ready, it turns into those little hairs.
00:05:07No one cares enough to remove them because that would be useless work, and those hairs
00:05:11don't harm anyone.
00:05:13Those little black dots on car windows are called frits – nothing to frit about.
00:05:18They're supposed to make the surface of the glass rougher so that the adhesive can
00:05:22stick and glue the glass to the car frame better.
00:05:25The black enamel also blocks UV light that can melt the adhesive underneath the bands
00:05:29around the window.
00:05:31The black bands heat up faster than the transparent glass.
00:05:35And luckily, the little dots are there to help distribute the temperature evenly.
00:05:40Now, buses have such huge steering wheels for a reason.
00:05:44Buses are bigger than cars, and also weigh heavier.
00:05:47So it's harder to turn a bus around, and you need way more strength to do so when you
00:05:52drive a car.
00:05:53A bigger steering wheel, which has a bigger radius, allows the vehicle to turn more easily.
00:05:59And it requires less force than you need should the wheel be smaller.
00:06:04Trucks have big steering wheels for the same reason.
00:06:07Also, buses usually have those bright patterns on their seats.
00:06:11The reason is actually pretty disgusting.
00:06:14Those patterns are supposed to hide stains on the seats.
00:06:17The brighter the seat is, and the more patterns it has, the harder it is for a passenger to
00:06:21notice stains.
00:06:23Even better, the patterns are usually so bright that no person wants to look at them for long
00:06:28enough to spot the stains.
00:06:30So yeah, the patterns are literally there to make you look away.
00:06:34And if you still do look, to make the dirt less noticeable.
00:06:38Can I please hear a EWWWWW?
00:06:41And that's the exact reason why hospitals and hotels use white sheets – to show how
00:06:46clean they are and how high their standards are.
00:06:49We all know there's light in refrigerators – I bet you've tried to peek inside to
00:06:53catch it turning off at least once.
00:06:56Yeah.
00:06:57But the freezer, on the other hand, doesn't have any light inside.
00:07:01So why is that, we have to ask?
00:07:03Well, the main reason is that installing an additional light in the freezer costs the
00:07:07manufacturer money.
00:07:09It might not seem like much, but keep in mind that it's not just a matter of one light,
00:07:14but also the wiring, the fixture, the switch, and so on.
00:07:18And manufacturers want to save as much money as possible.
00:07:21Besides, no one really needs a light in the freezer.
00:07:24It's not like you browse your freezer as often as the main part of the refrigerator.
00:07:29Also, in older freezers, ice crystallizes in the compartment, meaning that the light
00:07:34would get covered with ice anyways.
00:07:37Maybe that's why there was no light initially, and then it just stuck, or froze.
00:07:42Many backpacks have a diamond patch with two parallel cut-out slits on the front.
00:07:47It's made for your convenience.
00:07:50You can attach something like a water bottle or a pair of shoes to this slit.
00:07:54It comes in especially handy when you go hiking.
00:07:57Imagine not having to hold all these things in your hands, cuz you're gonna need your
00:08:01hands to fight off the bears!
00:08:03Hey, just kidding.
00:08:06Some men wear shoes with hidden heel lifts to look taller.
00:08:09Such shoes can make a person up to 6 inches taller.
00:08:13They look like regular shoes, but inside, they have this extra insert.
00:08:17Sometimes, such an insert is glued down.
00:08:21Sometimes it's removable, and you can choose the height you need yourself.
00:08:26When the Titanic hit the iceberg and sank sometime later, the Atlantic Ocean was around
00:08:3028 degrees Fahrenheit, which means the water was below its freezing point.
00:08:35No wonder so many passengers didn't make it.
00:08:40Some birds have a row of bristles protruding from the edges of their eyelids.
00:08:44Those bristles can probably be called eyelashes, but while human eyelashes are modified hairs
00:08:49meant to protect the eye, bird eyelashes are modified feathers.
00:08:55Identical twins don't actually have the same fingerprints, so you can't blame your misdeeds
00:09:00on your sibling after all.
00:09:02Different factors during development in the womb, like the position of the womb, umbilical
00:09:06cord length, and the rate of finger growth, impact fingerprints.
00:09:12Earth's rotation speed is changing.
00:09:14It's slowing down right now while we're talking.
00:09:17It means that, on average, the length of the day gets 1.8 seconds longer every century.
00:09:23600 million years ago, a day lasted a mere 21 hours.
00:09:29Most world maps are wrong.
00:09:31On the majority of maps, they still use the Mercator Projection, which was the first developed
00:09:36in 1569.
00:09:38But this method is very inaccurate and makes Alaska look as large as Brazil, while in reality,
00:09:45it's five times smaller.
00:09:47As for Greenland, it looks 14 times larger than it actually is.
00:09:51For a map to be precise, it would need to be life-sized and round, not flat.
00:09:58Ants don't have lungs.
00:10:00They breathe through tiny openings known as spiracles.
00:10:03An ant may have nine or ten of those on each side of the body, depending on the species.
00:10:10The average color of the universe is poetically called cosmic latte.
00:10:15In a 2002 study, scientists discovered that the light coming from other galaxies averaged
00:10:20into a beige color that was very close to white, just like the drink beloved by many.
00:10:28There is such a thing as minus decibels.
00:10:30The quietest place on Earth is Microsoft's anechoic chamber in Redmond, USA.
00:10:36The level of sound there is minus 20.6 decibels.
00:10:40Such chambers are built out of heavy concrete and bricks and are placed on springs to stop
00:10:45vibrations from entering the chamber through the floor.
00:10:50Bananas are radioactive!
00:10:52Wait, where did you go?
00:10:55It's not that bad.
00:10:56Bananas are rich in potassium, so each banana is slightly radioactive due to the natural
00:11:00isotope potassium-40.
00:11:03On the other hand, your body contains around 16 mg of potassium-40, so you're actually
00:11:09about 280 times more radioactive than that poor banana.
00:11:13But in any case, your body gets rid of that excess potassium-40 from a banana within several
00:11:18hours.
00:11:22There's simply no such thing as a straight line.
00:11:25You just need to zoom in close enough and you're bound to spot some irregularities.
00:11:29Even a laser light beam is a bit curved.
00:11:34In emergencies, fish form orderly lines.
00:11:37For example, when evacuating through narrow spaces in dangerous situations, school of
00:11:42neon tetrafish queue so that they don't crash into one another or clog up the line.
00:11:48Scientists think that this behavior means that fish can respect social rules even in
00:11:52emergency situations, unlike us humans.
00:11:58Hippos can't swim.
00:12:00These animals have large bones.
00:12:02These bones are so big and dense that it makes hippos barely buoyant at all.
00:12:06So these animals don't swim.
00:12:08Instead, they perform something like a slow-motion gallop on the riverbed.
00:12:14Hippos can also sleep underwater, thanks to a reflex that allows them to rise to the surface,
00:12:19take a breath, and sink back down to the bottom without waking up.
00:12:26Lego bricks can withstand compression better than concrete.
00:12:30A regular plastic Lego brick can support the weight of 375,000 other bricks before it breaks.
00:12:38Theoretically, it could allow you to build a tower more than 2 miles in height.
00:12:42But if we decide to scale this up to house-sized bricks, the price would be exorbitant.
00:12:49If you ever go to space, you can take your yo-yo with you.
00:12:52In 2012, NASA astronaut Don Pettit took a yo-yo on board the International Space Station
00:12:58and used it to show some tricks.
00:13:01You see, a yo-yo mostly relies on the laws of conservation of angular momentum to perform
00:13:06tricks.
00:13:07And if you keep the string taut, these laws apply in microgravity too.
00:13:12There's a theory that claims that we sweat when we're anxious, to alert the brains of
00:13:17other people that they're primed for that danger that's making us feel anxiety.
00:13:22Brain scans have revealed that when you sniff the sweat produced by a panicking person,
00:13:26regions of the brain responsible for emotional and social signals light up.
00:13:31And when you are anxious, your sympathetic nervous system produces hormones, including
00:13:36adrenaline, which switches on your sweat glands.
00:13:40There are rainbows on Venus, and they're called glories.
00:13:44A glory looks like a series of colored concentric rings and is caused by the interference of
00:13:49light waves inside droplets rather than the process of reflection, refraction, and dispersion
00:13:54of light, which produces rainbows.
00:13:59Protons look like bagels, spheres, peanuts, and rugby balls.
00:14:03In other words, protons come in different shapes and sizes.
00:14:06Their appearance changes based on the speed of quarks, smaller particles within them.
00:14:12If you look at the moon while being in the southern hemisphere, it will seem to be upside
00:14:16down, and the men on the moon will look more like a rabbit.
00:14:21You will remember more of your dreams if you sleep badly and wake up many times throughout
00:14:25the night.
00:14:26You're also more likely to remember your dream if someone or something wakes you up in the
00:14:31middle of it.
00:14:33Dogs tilt their heads while listening to people to pinpoint familiar words, like walkies,
00:14:38more effectively.
00:14:39It also helps them to understand the tone of your voice better.
00:14:42There's also an idea that if a dog doesn't tilt its head often, it's because it relies
00:14:47more on sight and less on sound.
00:14:52Mirrors facing each other won't produce infinite reflections.
00:14:56Each next reflection will be darker than the previous one, and eventually, they will fade
00:15:00into invisibility.
00:15:02Mirrors absorb just a fraction of the energy of the light falling on them, so the total
00:15:07number of reflections mirrors can produce is around several hundred.
00:15:12You can smell ants, since many species of these insects produce strong-smelling chemicals
00:15:17when they feel threatened or angry, or when they're being squished.
00:15:21Trap-jaw ants release a chocolatey smell when they're crushed, and citronella ants give
00:15:26off a lemony odor when they're threatened.
00:15:31Giraffes hum when they want to communicate with each other.
00:15:34Researchers think that this low-frequency humming might be a form of contact call between
00:15:39individuals that have been separated from their herd.
00:15:42It can also help giraffes find each other in the dark.
00:15:45But the coolest thing about these magnificent animals?
00:15:48Some scientists think that they can sleep-talk, too!
00:15:54And a cool bonus story for you!
00:15:57About a marathon runner who took over 50 years to finish the race!
00:16:01Japanese marathoner-runner Shizu Kanakuri was selected as one of the two athletes that
00:16:06Japan could send to the 1912 Stockholm Olympics.
00:16:10But Kanakuri shockingly disappeared during the marathon race!
00:16:14It turned out that after a rough 18-day-long trip to Stockholm, first by ship and then
00:16:19by train, the man was exhausted.
00:16:23During the race, he stopped running because his condition simply didn't allow him to
00:16:27run further.
00:16:28The athlete stumbled into a nearby garden party where he drank orange juice and stayed
00:16:32for a while to recover.
00:16:34Later, Kanakuri was so embarrassed by his failure that he returned to Japan without
00:16:39notifying anyone, including race officials.
00:16:43So Swedish authorities considered him missing for 50 years before finding out that he was
00:16:48peacefully living in his home country.
00:16:51In 1967, the athlete was offered the opportunity to finish his run.
00:16:56He accepted.
00:16:5754 years, 8 months, 6 days, 5 hours, 32 minutes and 20.3 seconds after he started the race,
00:17:05he completed the marathon.
00:17:07It was a long trip.
00:17:08Along the way, the man got married, had 6 kids and 10 grandchildren.
00:17:13Let's admit it, who hasn't enjoyed leftover pasta when not in the mood to cook something
00:17:20fresh?
00:17:21But most people don't know about the most efficient way to microwave this pasta.
00:17:26It'll heat evenly if you dig a hole in the middle, making the dish look like a large
00:17:30donut.
00:17:33To keep your pastries fresh, cover them with a slice of bread.
00:17:37If you want to keep your cookies in a bag, put some bread inside.
00:17:40This will keep them soft and prevent them from drying.
00:17:45You can use rubber bands to tie plastic bags.
00:17:48Or you can cut the top of a plastic bottle.
00:17:51Place it over an open bag this way and just screw the two parts shut.
00:17:56When making yourself a BLT, which stands for bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich, lace the
00:18:01slices of bacon together this way.
00:18:03This way, your sandwich will have proper coverage.
00:18:08The best way to slice bread is upside down, starting on the tougher side.
00:18:13This way, you'll preserve the shape of the loaf.
00:18:15You should also wait until the bread has cooled down to room temperature before cutting it.
00:18:23When you're having drinks outside, cover the glasses or cups with cupcake liners.
00:18:27This will stop all kinds of bugs from getting into the drinks.
00:18:32Try putting ice cream containers in Ziploc bags before storing them in the freezer.
00:18:37If you don't do this, the next day, you'll have problems scooping the product.
00:18:42Inside the plastic bag, your ice cream will remain soft.
00:18:48Instead of opening a bag of popcorn the traditional way, rip a hole in the side of the bag.
00:18:54This way, your hands won't get greasy.
00:18:58Ever dreamed of a perfect sandwich where nothing sticks out and the filling is spread evenly?
00:19:03Here you go.
00:19:04Simply cut round sandwich fillings in half.
00:19:07This way, they'll cover the entire surface of the bread.
00:19:13It's possible to turn the metal plate on your stapler's base.
00:19:16If you rotate it, stapler pins will be bent outward.
00:19:19It'll allow you to staple something only temporarily, and the staples can be easily removed later.
00:19:27Separating pomegranate seeds can be quite challenging, but not if you use this method.
00:19:32First, take a very sharp knife and make four to six score cuts going from the top to the bottom,
00:19:38cutting through the skin, but not the fruit itself.
00:19:41Then, fill a bowl with warm water.
00:19:44Submerge the pomegranate in this water bath.
00:19:47This will prevent the bright red juice from staining your clothes and everything around if any seeds burst.
00:19:52Then, gently crack the pomegranate open along the score lines.
00:19:56Then, just pull each section outward.
00:20:01There's a way to hold a burger without it falling apart in your hands.
00:20:04Put your three middle fingers on top and your pinky and thumb at the bottom.
00:20:08This will keep all the filling inside.
00:20:12Pulling the trash out of the can or putting inside a new plastic bag may turn out to be very tricky,
00:20:18but by drilling a few holes in the trash can, you can make this task much easier.
00:20:24This way, air can enter the trash can beneath the seal of the plastic bag.
00:20:28It'll make it impossible for the bag to vacuum pack itself into the can.
00:20:35Try eating your cheesy snacks with the help of chopsticks.
00:20:38This way, there won't be any grease on your fingers.
00:20:43If you stash away your garbage bags, fold them into a neat origami triangle.
00:20:48This will save you space.
00:20:52The right way to eat a cupcake is munching on it like you would a sandwich.
00:20:56First, pull the cupcake out of the wrapper.
00:20:59After that, break off the bottom of the pastry and place it on top.
00:21:03This will allow you to enjoy the frosting in every bite.
00:21:09Some boxes of chocolates have little dents in between the holes for candies.
00:21:13If you push such a dent, the chocolates surrounding it will pop out of their compartments.
00:21:20If you need to microwave two bowls at the same time, place one of them on top of a cup.
00:21:27When munching on chicken wings, debone them by holding, twisting, and pulling out the two bones.
00:21:35After opening a cereal box, some people transfer its entire contents into a separate container.
00:21:41Others fold the plastic and put the bag back in the box,
00:21:44hoping to finish it before the cereal goes stale.
00:21:46But here's another, much better technique.
00:21:49Here you go. As simple as that.
00:21:54When using a blender, fill it with the liquids first.
00:21:57Only after adding your milk, coconut water, or yogurt, put berries inside, fruit, or spinach.
00:22:05When you're crossing out some words, don't just draw lines over them.
00:22:08This won't help if someone wants to figure out what you wrote.
00:22:11Instead, write other letters over the words.
00:22:17Hold your piece of pizza so that it forms a U-shape.
00:22:19This will prevent the thing from flopping over.
00:22:24You can usually find some silica gel in bags, shoes, and many other things you buy.
00:22:29This gel is placed there to absorb excess moisture.
00:22:33Don't throw the packages with the gel away.
00:22:36Every time your shoes get wet, place the gel inside.
00:22:38Your shoes will dry much faster than they would otherwise.
00:22:43From now on, you can skip the chip clip.
00:22:46Here's a fast way to keep your snacks fresh.
00:22:48Just make several folds to prevent the bag from opening, like this.
00:22:54Ranger rolling, which means rolling up clothes while packing,
00:22:58can help you save a lot of space in your suitcase.
00:23:00It'll also protect your things from wrinkles and make your bag more organized.
00:23:05Use this method for pants, t-shirts, pajamas, swimsuits, and casual clothes.
00:23:10Unfortunately, it doesn't work for oversized clothes like sweaters.
00:23:16You can use a clothing or tension rod
00:23:19to hang spray bottles inside the bathroom cabinet and save space.
00:23:25The hole in a ruler can be useful if you want to hang the device on a hook.
00:23:29You can also place a pencil tip in this hole if you need to draw a perfect circle.
00:23:36If you need to fill a container with water and it doesn't fit in your sink,
00:23:39a dustpan will come in handy.
00:23:41Just position it in a way that will funnel the water straight into the container below.
00:23:48Instead of slicing a watermelon, try cutting it crosswise.
00:23:51Now you have a convenient way of eating a watermelon stick,
00:23:55and the juice won't make a mess all around.
00:23:59By using ice cubes for your iced coffee, you dilute your drink, and it loses its flavor.
00:24:05Try coffee cubes instead. They're very easy to prepare.
00:24:08Pour some coffee into the ice cube tray and freeze it.
00:24:13Apparently, there's even a correct way to eat chips.
00:24:17Nah, it's not as simple as popping them into your mouth.
00:24:19If we talk about such chips as Pringles,
00:24:22try placing them on your tongue with the concave side down.
00:24:25It's usually more flavorful than the other.
00:24:28Another trick, slide a long piece of paper into the can and then carefully pull it out.
00:24:34Here's your makeshift Pringles tray.
00:24:38A staple will effortlessly keep your key ring open while you tack on new keys.
00:24:44Most kitchen shears have metal plier-like teeth in the middle between the handle grips.
00:24:49They can help you crack nuts, crab shells, and other tough products.
00:24:53You can also open jars and bottles or remove herb stems with their help.
00:25:00The easiest way to eat mangoes is by cutting them into cubes.
00:25:03This way, you don't even need to peel the fruit.
00:25:08To untie a knot really fast, twist the loose end as much as you can and push it through the knot.
00:25:16The best way to peel a banana is by starting from the bottom where the black spot is.
00:25:21This makes the whole experience much neater.
00:25:23No more squished bananas and annoying strings.
00:25:29Sometimes you need to get away from your computer but don't want to keep logging back in.
00:25:33Put your mouse over the top of an analog watch.
00:25:36The mouse will perceive the ticking second hand's movement
00:25:39and this will prevent your computer screen from turning black.
00:25:44Try breaking in your shoes by putting them on while wearing thick socks
00:25:48and then blow-drying the tight areas.
00:25:52Activated bamboo charcoal can help you remove unpleasant odors and bacteria.
00:25:57Put it in a mesh bag and leave it in the room you need to freshen up.
00:26:00No more costly air purifiers.
00:26:04You can keep your cold meals cold and your food fresh by making a DIY ice pack.
00:26:09Take a sponge and fill it with water.
00:26:12Then put it in a plastic bag and leave it in the freezer.
00:26:15Once the sponge is frozen, it'll stay this way for a long time.
00:26:19Keep in mind that you should use a watertight bag and a fresh sponge.
00:26:24You can reuse your old curtain rings by placing them on a hanger.
00:26:28Then put your scarves or anything else that will fit through them.
00:26:31This will help you save space
00:26:33and make it easier for you to look through the things in your wardrobe.
00:26:37Your tummy acid can chow down on a razor blade like it's no big deal.
00:26:42Some penguins can totally out-hide us humans.
00:26:45And you could potentially turn a jar of peanut butter
00:26:48into a rocking diamond ring to pop the question to your boo.
00:26:52Sounds crazy.
00:26:53Well, it's all true.
00:26:54If you're itching for more facts like these and want to learn why salty crackers
00:26:58are more of a tooth hazard than sugary treats, then stay tuned.
00:27:05Mattresses get heavier over time.
00:27:07As we sleep, our mattresses soak up all our skin oils, sweat, and tears.
00:27:13Yes, I also cry at night.
00:27:15This creates the perfect environment for dust mites, fungi, and bacteria to thrive.
00:27:21Over five years, your mattress might collect up to 880 pints of body fluids.
00:27:27Dead skin is another big weight-adding factor too.
00:27:31With one and a half million skin cells shed hourly,
00:27:34these flakes pile up and become a feast for dust mites.
00:27:37An average used mattress could be home to up to 10 million of these critters.
00:27:42Your spilled coffee makes your mattress heavier too.
00:27:45Foam layers in a mattress trap the liquid and add to its weight.
00:27:49If you know Miss Piggy from The Muppets or Yoda from Star Wars,
00:27:53you'll instantly recognize their unique voices.
00:27:56It's hard to believe they have anything in common, right?
00:27:59Well, Frank Oz spilled the beans in 2021 in his interview.
00:28:04Starting with The Muppet Show and Sesame Street,
00:28:06Frank gave life to characters like Miss Piggy, Cookie Monster, Grover, and more.
00:28:11Then he ventured into the galaxy far, far away to voice Yoda
00:28:15and even came up with the alien's iconic way of speaking.
00:28:19Let's say you decided to move to the healthy side
00:28:22and started munching on carrot sticks instead of your regular, not-exactly-healthy snacks.
00:28:28Suddenly, you catch a glimpse of yourself in the mirror
00:28:31and realize that your skin has a subtle orange tint.
00:28:35Say what now?
00:28:36Nope, you're not dreaming.
00:28:38All that beta-carotene in orange fruits and veggies can give your skin a temporary glow-up.
00:28:43Don't worry though.
00:28:44Just switch up your snacks and the oompa-loompa look will fade in no time.
00:28:49Some people believe there's no such thing as too much garlic.
00:28:52And they're right!
00:28:54For a fun science experiment, try tasting garlic through your feet.
00:28:58The American Chemical Society claims it's totally possible.
00:29:02Cut a piece of garlic, place it in a bag, put your bare feet inside, and wait.
00:29:08Thanks to a compound called allicin,
00:29:10the garlic will travel through your skin to your mouth and nose.
00:29:14Kids of identical twins share a special bond.
00:29:17Being considered both cousins and half-siblings,
00:29:20this unique relationship is due to their genetic similarities.
00:29:23They inherit similar DNA from their identical twin parents.
00:29:28While legally they are cousins, genetically, they're more like half-siblings.
00:29:33In fact, they share about 25% of their DNA, double the amount shared by regular cousins.
00:29:39This makes them more genetically related than typical cousins,
00:29:42but not as close as full siblings or identical twins.
00:29:47A man in the U.S. has been surviving on nothing but 20 potatoes a day for two months.
00:29:54Chris Voigt from Washington State Potato Commission wanted to show
00:29:57that potatoes aren't just a bunch of carbs, but are actually good for you.
00:30:02You may think that eating spuds alone may make you gain a few extra pounds,
00:30:06but Chris shed some pounds and lowered his cholesterol instead.
00:30:10By the way, in theory, you could even survive eating taters and butter only.
00:30:15Not only are potatoes cool on Earth, but scientists have also made them cool in space.
00:30:20They're the first plants ever grown beyond Earth.
00:30:23In the early 90s, there was an experiment about growing potatoes in space.
00:30:28The study aimed to understand how microgravity conditions affected the growth of potatoes.
00:30:34Potatoes were chosen for their resilience to different climates
00:30:37and ability to thrive in extreme conditions.
00:30:40We need our stomach acid to be super acidic to break down all the variety of foods we eat.
00:30:47It's so strong that it can even dissolve some metals.
00:30:51For example, razor blades dissolve in stomach acid pretty quickly.
00:30:55After 24 hours, they're already 63% gone.
00:31:00Double-edged blades can be broken within 15 hours,
00:31:03while single-edged blades disappear in just two hours.
00:31:06Batteries are safe, but pennies don't even get a scratch.
00:31:11Good thing our stomach has a protective layer of mucus and bicarbonate to keep everything in check.
00:31:16The reason we're taller in the morning than at night is the intervertebral discs in our spine.
00:31:23These discs are mostly water, and throughout the day,
00:31:26they get squished down from all the bending and twisting we do.
00:31:30But when we sleep, our spines get a chance to recover.
00:31:33Scientists have found that there are some pretty big gaps between adult brains and teenage brains.
00:31:39One key player in this brain game is the prefrontal cortex.
00:31:44This part of the brain handles important stuff like decision-making and impulse control,
00:31:48but it's not all grown up until you hit your 20s.
00:31:52Adults have their prefrontal cortex,
00:31:54and it's the part of the brain that controls the way we think and act.
00:31:58If a cow ever smiles at you, you're going to be in for a shock.
00:32:02They don't even have upper front teeth.
00:32:04Instead, they have a special dental pad that helps them munch on grass like a pro.
00:32:10When it comes to chewing, cows have it down to a teeth.
00:32:14But it's not all grown up until you hit your 20s.
00:32:17Adults have their prefrontal cortex in full swing,
00:32:20helping them make smart choices and think things through.
00:32:23When it comes to chewing, cows have it down to a science.
00:32:29They have sharp incisors at the bottom of their mouth for cutting grass
00:32:32and molars at the back for grinding it all up.
00:32:35It all works smoothly, like a quality food processor.
00:32:40Researchers have discovered a penguin species that lived 37 million years ago
00:32:44and would have been as tall as most humans.
00:32:47This giant penguin, also known as the Colossus penguin,
00:32:51stood at a whopping 7 feet tall from toe to beak tip and weighed as much as 250 pounds.
00:32:59To put that in perspective, today's biggest penguin,
00:33:02the Emperor penguin, is only 3.6 feet tall and weighs between 50 and 100 pounds.
00:33:09The researchers have also found the longest recorded fused ankle foot bone
00:33:13and parts of a wing bone from this ancient species.
00:33:17With their larger build, these giant penguins were able to dive underwater
00:33:21for longer periods of time, up to 40 minutes, to hunt for fish.
00:33:27Every year, people around the world take about 1.81 trillion photos.
00:33:33That's around 57,000 photos snapped every second,
00:33:37or a whopping 5 billion pics snapped daily.
00:33:41These days we take more photos every two minutes than were taken in the entire 19th century.
00:33:47Cheese!
00:33:49In Singapore, researchers gave cyborg cockroaches a spin in the desert
00:33:53to try them out for search and rescue missions down the road.
00:33:57Turns out, a team of 20 roaches decked out with computer backpacks
00:34:01can actually work together as a swarm.
00:34:04The scientists were able to steer the roaches by sending commands through the backpacks,
00:34:08thanks to a cool new algorithm they came up with.
00:34:11These high-tech bugs could be a real game-changer
00:34:14in disaster situations when it comes to sniffing out survivors.
00:34:19What do peanut butter and an engagement ring have in common?
00:34:23Both of them contain diamonds.
00:34:25Scientists have learned how to turn peanut butter into diamonds.
00:34:29They extracted oxygen from CO2, got carbon,
00:34:33and then put it under intense pressure, forming diamonds in the end.
00:34:37Double-stuffed Oreo cookies aren't double-stuffed, in fact.
00:34:41A math teacher, Dan Anderson, weighed 10 regular Oreos,
00:34:4510 double-stuffed Oreos, 10 mega-stuffed Oreos, and 5 wafers.
00:34:50Turns out, double-stuffed Oreos are only 1.86 stuffed Oreos.
00:34:56Next time you ditch your favorite candies because of your fear of cavities,
00:35:00think twice about what you replace those candies with.
00:35:03Crackers are even more harmful for your teeth than sugar.
00:35:06It's not sugar, but acid that decays the teeth enamel.
00:35:09Sticky crackers produce that acid.
00:35:12It's a good environment for bacteria.
00:35:14They're gonna feast in between your teeth.
00:35:18Water is something that just can't go off.
00:35:21How come there are these expiration dates on water bottles, then?
00:35:25The expiration date on mineral water doesn't refer to the water.
00:35:28It's about the bottle that can actually get expired.
00:35:32The thing is, over time, it starts leaking some chemicals that aren't quite safe.
00:35:39So, you're on a desert safari, but things don't go as planned.
00:35:46Now, you've run out of water in one of the hottest and driest places on the planet.
00:35:52You might think you can get some water from a cactus.
00:35:54But sorry, that's just a myth.
00:35:57In fact, most cactuses have protective chemicals inside them
00:36:00that can make you sick if you try to eat them.
00:36:03There are only a couple of exceptions.
00:36:05The prickly pear and one type of barrel cactus called the fishhook barrel cactus
00:36:10have milder chemicals and could give you some water if you really needed it.
00:36:15Now, if you believe you can escape an alligator if you run in a zigzag,
00:36:19well, I need to disappoint you.
00:36:21This isn't true either.
00:36:22Just run as fast as you can.
00:36:24Alligators rarely chase humans on land.
00:36:28They prefer to ambush their prey in the water, where they are faster and more agile.
00:36:33After all, they can swim at 10 miles per hour.
00:36:36So, the chance of an alligator chasing a human on land is very low.
00:36:40This zigzag running advice is more of a joke than a serious survival strategy.
00:36:47Don't believe the myth claiming you can survive a wild animal attack
00:36:51if you pretend to not be alive.
00:36:54Okay, in the animal kingdom, playing dead is a common defense tactic.
00:36:58Some animals even excrete certain odors to enhance the illusion and deter predators.
00:37:03Yet, for humans, that's different.
00:37:06Investigation into 14 different types of animals in North America
00:37:10revealed that, in most situations, it's crucial to stay alert and knowledgeable
00:37:14to be able to take the right actions in time.
00:37:18The next popular, but false, idea is that polar bears hide their noses with their paws while
00:37:23hunting.
00:37:24People think they do it because their black noses are easy to see against the ice
00:37:29while their fur blends in.
00:37:30However, experts have spent years using telescopes to watch polar bears hunting seals in the Arctic.
00:37:37They've observed them for a long time, even up to 24 hours,
00:37:41and have never seen them cover their noses like that.
00:37:44Unless they have to sneeze.
00:37:45Eh, just joking.
00:37:47Another belief is that running downhill will save you from a bear.
00:37:51This is based on the idea that their shorter front legs struggle to run downhill.
00:37:56In reality, bears are incredibly fast runners,
00:37:59capable of reaching speeds of over 37 miles per hour.
00:38:03And they can sprint downhill just as easily as uphill.
00:38:06So, you'll need another strategy.
00:38:09The myth that vehicle headrests are designed to be detachable and sharp to break windows
00:38:14is false.
00:38:15The primary function of a headrest is to prevent neck damage in a crash.
00:38:20Research and documents about the headrest design don't mention any feature for breaking windows.
00:38:25Plus, not all vehicles have removable headrests,
00:38:28and those that are detachable are not necessarily sharp.
00:38:35Touching a baby bird will make its parents abandon it.
00:38:38Actually, birds have a limited sense of smell.
00:38:41So, they're unlikely to detect human scent on their babies.
00:38:45This misconception often leads people to leave fledgling birds alone,
00:38:49thinking they're helping.
00:38:50But in reality, these young birds might need assistance.
00:38:54But also, it's common for young birds to leave the nest before they can fly well,
00:38:58and their parents usually to continue to feed them on the ground.
00:39:02If you find a baby bird that has fallen out of its nest,
00:39:05it's best to leave it alone as the parents are likely nearby
00:39:09and will continue to care for it.
00:39:12The widespread belief that humans use only 10% of their brains is a myth too.
00:39:17Advanced neuroimaging tools, like PET scans,
00:39:20show that the entire brain is active, even during sleep.
00:39:24These scans reveal continuous activity across the brain,
00:39:27involved in functions such as regulating, interpreting, and acting.
00:39:32This debunks the idea that large parts of the brain remain inactive.
00:39:37The myth that shaving body hair makes it grow back thicker and darker is false.
00:39:43When you shave facial or body hair, it doesn't change its thickness,
00:39:46color, or rate of growth.
00:39:48Shaving just leaves hairs with blunt tips.
00:39:52These newly cut, blunt tips might feel coarser or stubbier as the hair grows out.
00:39:57During this phase, the hair may seem more noticeable and could appear darker or thicker.
00:40:02The tall tale that daddy long legs are the world's most venomous spiders
00:40:07is just a bit of an overstatement.
00:40:09These critters aren't even true spiders.
00:40:12They have been wrongly accused of packing a dangerous venomous bunch.
00:40:16In fact, they don't have venom glands at all,
00:40:18and their tiny fangs can't even break human skin.
00:40:21They're not venomous, but they're venomous enough to kill you.
00:40:25They're not venomous, but they're venomous enough to kill you.
00:40:28The belief that everyone in medieval times kicked the bucket in their 30s is way off.
00:40:34Life expectancy is just an average.
00:40:37Back then, a lot of people didn't make it past childhood
00:40:40due to things like rampant infant mortality and risky childbirth.
00:40:44But now, with the advent of modern technology,
00:40:46it's clear that life expectancy is just an average.
00:40:49It's not as bad as it used to be, but it's not as good as it used to be.
00:40:53Due to things like rampant infant mortality and risky childbirth.
00:40:58But if you went through those early life hurdles and hit your 20s,
00:41:01you had a decent shot at seeing your 50s or even 70s.
00:41:05Most of our medieval life expectancy data comes from noble dudes,
00:41:09who often ended up as battlefield statistics, skewing the numbers.
00:41:14Soap is often seen as the arch-nemesis of cast-iron cookware,
00:41:18but let's bust that myth with a little kitchen science.
00:41:21The fear is that soap will take away the precious seasoning
00:41:25that makes cast-iron pans non-stick and awesome.
00:41:28Modern soaps are much gentler than those old lye-heavy ones
00:41:32that started this whole non-soap-on-cast-iron rule.
00:41:35Today's soaps won't harm your pan's seasoning, especially if it's well-established.
00:41:45The old wait-an-hour-after-eating-before-you-swim rule
00:41:48is more of a misconception than a medical must.
00:41:52The idea was that swimming right after a big meal could lead to cramps.
00:41:56But in reality, it's not a hard rule.
00:41:59Sure, your body diverts blood to your stomach for better digestion,
00:42:03which could, theoretically, leave less for your muscles, increasing the risk of cramps.
00:42:08But for most people, a little light post-snack swimming isn't a recipe for disaster.
00:42:15Bundling up because you think cold weather causes colds?
00:42:18Well, it's not exactly the air that's to blame.
00:42:21It's true that we often start sniffling when the temperature drops,
00:42:25but it's not the cold itself doing the deed.
00:42:27The real culprits are the viruses that cause colds,
00:42:31which just happen to love those lower temperatures.
00:42:34So while chilly weather provides a cozy playground for these germs,
00:42:38catching a cold still requires catching the virus.
00:42:41In other words, it's not the frosty weather,
00:42:44but the frosty-weather-loving viruses that you need to watch out for.
00:42:48Oh look, it's that time again when a Facebook privacy hoax makes the rounds,
00:42:53convincing people that a simple copy-paste can magically protect their data.
00:42:58Yes, the classic, I-do-not-give-Facebook-permission spiel is back.
00:43:03Charming users into thinking this status update is a legally binding shield against privacy breaches.
00:43:09Spoiler alert, it's not.
00:43:11These posts claim that declaring sovereignty over your personal content on your timeline
00:43:15will stop Facebook from using your photos, information, and messages.
00:43:20Facebook's actual policies and user agreements,
00:43:23which everyone agreed to by signing up, still hold the real power.
00:43:30Shaving a double-coated dog is okay?
00:43:33No, it's a big no-no, with some lasting downsides.
00:43:36These dogs have a soft undercoat and a tougher topcoat.
00:43:40Shaving messes up their growth balance,
00:43:43leading to a mismatched and not-so-pretty coat.
00:43:46Plus, there's only a 50-50 chance the double-coat will return to its former glory, if at all.
00:43:52Contrary to popular belief, shaving doesn't cool them down.
00:43:55It actually wrecks the coat's natural air circulation system.
00:43:59Other risks include matting, sunburn, and impaired temperature regulation.
00:44:04The coat might never look or feel the same again.
00:44:08Go for a de-shedding treatment.
00:44:10It removes excess undercoat, helps your dog stay cool,
00:44:15and keeps the coat in top shape, all without the drama of a full shave.
00:44:21It's time to look at common misconceptions and myths associated with treating frostbite.
00:44:26Rubbing frostbitten skin cannot help.
00:44:29It can actually worsen the condition and lead to tissue damage.
00:44:32The idea that hot water should be used for re-warming the affected areas is wrong, too.
00:44:37Use lukewarm water instead to avoid burns.
00:44:44In a supermarket, you pass by a shelf with eggs and try to decide which ones are better.
00:44:50The white ones or the brown ones?
00:44:51There's practically no difference between them.
00:44:54The egg's color depends on the breed of the chicken.
00:44:57These birds produce two different color pigments.
00:44:59You can take eggs of any color because the nutritional components of the eggs are almost
00:45:04the same.
00:45:05So, what came first?
00:45:07The brown egg or the white egg?
00:45:09Never mind.
00:45:10It's enough to use a small amount of toothpaste to brush your teeth, the size of a pea.
00:45:15But the ads show that you have to cover the entire toothbrush with paste as a marketing
00:45:20ploy.
00:45:21Manufacturers want you to buy a new tube faster.
00:45:24A plane leaves white lines behind in the blue sky,
00:45:27thanks to the condensation of carbon dioxide, steam, and burning fuel.
00:45:32In winter, heated air visibly comes out of your mouth.
00:45:36The same principle works here.
00:45:38It's always icy at the altitude where planes are flying.
00:45:41Exhaust and hot air comes out of the turbines.
00:45:44When it collides with cold air, it creates thick lines of steam.
00:45:48Almost all hotels have white bedsheets.
00:45:51They choose this color specifically to show how high their standards of cleanliness are.
00:45:56The whiter and brighter the sheets are, the more luxurious the hotel seems.
00:46:01It's much easier to see dirt and stains on white linen.
00:46:03It's like proof that you've checked into a cleaned room.
00:46:07Gasoline looks like a rainbow in a puddle because it can't mix with water.
00:46:12It forms a thin membrane over it.
00:46:14When light reflects from it and the water at the same time, you've got a rainbow.
00:46:19The Do Not Disturb sign on your hotel room door is not a requirement but just a suggestion.
00:46:25Maids and staff have the right to go there if they suspect something's wrong,
00:46:30especially if you don't remove the sign for 24 hours.
00:46:34Why do clocks go to the right?
00:46:36The sun is the main reason.
00:46:38In ancient times, when people invented the sundial, the sun's shadow was moving to the
00:46:43right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere.
00:46:47Mechanical clocks were first invented in the Northern Hemisphere,
00:46:51so it always goes right.
00:46:52Or, as we now say, clockwise.
00:46:55Why are the cups at parties colored red?
00:46:58Because it helps you quickly find your drink on the table among snacks and drinks,
00:47:02and all those other red cups.
00:47:04Here's a hint – write your name, Michael, on the cup.
00:47:08If your name is Michael.
00:47:09Also, red is considered a color that provokes action.
00:47:13At the psychological level, it seems the red cup is commanding you,
00:47:17Hey, drink me up!
00:47:19They believe yellow taxis have their roots in 15th-century Italy.
00:47:24One postal businessman used yellow cabins for delivering mail.
00:47:28He wanted everyone to recognize his carts.
00:47:31About 60-80% of people, mostly age 15-25, occasionally have goosebump-induced
00:47:38déjà vu moments.
00:47:40It's fleeting and unpredictable, and scientists are still not 100% sure why it happens
00:47:46and can't control it.
00:47:47To understand it better, they tried to create memories for patients under hypnosis.
00:47:52Then they asked them to forget or remember the memory,
00:47:55and it made them experience déjà vu later.
00:47:58Other scientists tried to recreate it in virtual reality
00:48:01with scenes in games that looked alike.
00:48:04The experiments made them believe déjà vu is your memory playing tricks on you.
00:48:09You get into a situation that's similar to a real memory that you have,
00:48:13but you can't remember it completely.
00:48:15Your brain notices the similarities and leaves you with a strange feeling of already seen.
00:48:21That's how déjà vu translates from French.
00:48:24Another version is that it's a memory glitch.
00:48:27It's more likely to happen when you're stressed.
00:48:29So when you're under pressure or have a lot of information to process at once,
00:48:34some of it can end up in long-term memory instead of short-term memory.
00:48:39So you take your best friend Max to the doggy park.
00:48:42He meets the labradoodle of his dreams, and they start playing together.
00:48:46Peaceful tail wagging quickly grows into biting each other.
00:48:50Oh no, they're going for the necks!
00:48:52You grab Max and rush back home.
00:48:55Well, in fact, there was no need to rush home.
00:48:58Playing with open mouths is called mouth wrestling or jaw sparring.
00:49:02It's a healthy way of interaction between dogs.
00:49:05They inherited this habit from their wolf ancestors.
00:49:09When a dog is a puppy, it has to learn some important skills, including fighting.
00:49:13Mouthing is just an imitation of it.
00:49:16When a puppy matures, it will know how to protect itself and respect boundaries of other doggos.
00:49:22All the chasing, wrestling, growling, and face biting
00:49:25is a way to socialize with others and have fun in the dog world.
00:49:29It's something like sibling rivalry and playful fights in the human world.
00:49:33Cute kittens and cats under the age of 2 also practice mouthing.
00:49:38They often tumble over each other and bite one another's necks to let their hunter instincts out.
00:49:43In the wild, cats are fast and merciless, and they can't hide it behind all the purrs in the world.
00:49:50Play biting with other kitties can also teach your little Mr.
00:49:53Biscuit to be more gentle when it plays with you and other humans.
00:49:56So, it's all good.
00:49:58Cats like to sharpen their claws on your furniture to leave a visual mark on their territory.
00:50:03They also do it to let their claws renew and stretch their back and shoulders.
00:50:08The couch seems perfect for it because it's not too short and is sturdy enough.
00:50:13Well, you gotta find a good replacement with the same qualities
00:50:16to let your kitty scratch and release its emotions.
00:50:19Cats freak out when they see a cucumber because it looks too much like their long-time enemy,
00:50:25snakes.
00:50:25They're naturally programmed to jump up in the air to protect themselves from a bite.
00:50:30Anything that looks similar, from toys to eggplants, causes a similar reaction.
00:50:35It's never a good idea to show them things like that for fun.
00:50:39It can really mess up their mental health.
00:50:42Fish have gills and fins, but they don't have necks.
00:50:45Instead, they have a series of bones that connect their skull and shoulder girdle.
00:50:50One of the reasons for that is it would be really hard to be fast while swimming
00:50:55if they had a neck waggling back and forth.
00:50:57Plus, the moment a creature similar to a fish developed a neck,
00:51:01science automatically classified it as another group of animals.
00:51:05That means the official definition says if a creature has a neck, we can't call it a fish.
00:51:11The oldest neck scientists have on record belongs to one unusual creature that lived 375
00:51:17million years ago.
00:51:19It was part fish and part tetrapod, which is a term for an animal with four limbs.
00:51:24Now, rain won't always make the ground wet.
00:51:27There are very hot and dry areas where rain can evaporate even before it gets to the ground.
00:51:33It's something called phantom rain.
00:51:35You can see dense curtains of drops coming from above,
00:51:38but at the same time, nothing's on the ground, and none of the water reaches the living beings.
00:51:44Rats laugh when you tickle them.
00:51:46They mostly giggle when being tickled, and during one experiment where researchers tickled them,
00:51:51they even chased after their hands in a playful manner.
00:51:54All of the great apes, which is a group that includes gorillas, orangutans, bonobos,
00:51:59and chimpanzees are ticklish too, and generally respond to tickling with a pretty distinctive
00:52:04human-like laugh.
00:52:06Penguins, dogs, meerkats, and many others also seem to pretty much like it.
00:52:12Different nations have different systems when it comes to vehicle registration,
00:52:16including license plate color.
00:52:18Australia goes with an unlimited palette when it comes to plates.
00:52:22They include many different motifs and designs.
00:52:25In the UK, cars have two possible number plate colors – yellow at the back of a vehicle
00:52:31and white at the front.
00:52:32Both have black characters.
00:52:34It wasn't always like this.
00:52:36Number plates in this country used to have either white or silver characters.
00:52:40But starting from 1979, all vehicles must have the exact plates we see today for a reason.
00:52:47Every registration plate must be made from reflective material.
00:52:50So, if the number plate at the back of your car is white, it might reflect white light,
00:52:55which is not legal.
00:52:57Elephants have enormous ears, and normally they can hold them out to scan noise back and forth.
00:53:03But there are sometimes distant vocalizations and noise they can hear with their feet.
00:53:08When they detect something that's far away, elephants freeze and lean forward.
00:53:13They transfer weight to their front legs and may even lift up a front foot.
00:53:18Hearing with your toes!
00:53:20That's quite a feat!
00:53:23Fun fact!
00:53:23Olympic synchronized swimmers, now renamed artistic swimmers, don't usually wear swim caps.
00:53:29When they compete, they put Knox gelatin in their hair.
00:53:33The result resembles unflavored jello.
00:53:35Athletes mix the gelatin with water, and it turns into a gooey mixture.
00:53:40After that, they comb and brush the substance into their hair,
00:53:43pull it into a bun, and put a headpiece over it.
00:53:46When it all dries, it becomes really hard, and swimmers' hair doesn't fall out when they swim.
00:53:52They often add glitter and other decorations to make their hairstyles even more exciting.
00:53:57The blanket octopus is called this way because of the females of the species.
00:54:02They're super-sized and rarely seen.
00:54:04They have a long fleshy cape which encloses their tentacles.
00:54:08Female octopuses are large, up to 6.5 feet in length.
00:54:12Thanks to this cape, they look even larger and much more intimidating to potential predators.
00:54:17But the coolest thing about these creatures is that the male blanket octopus grows to
00:54:21be a mere 1 inch in length, which is smaller than a walnut!
00:54:25This makes the blanket octopus a species with the largest gender size difference
00:54:30in the entire animal kingdom.
00:54:33Red Bull has published a video showing the so-called world's fastest camera drone
00:54:38following a racing car around Silverstone's Grand Prix circuit.
00:54:42The Dutch Drone Gods are a company that custom-built the manually piloted drone
00:54:47designed specifically for keeping up with cars moving at speeds of over 186 mph.
00:54:53It took more than a year for Red Bull and the Dutch Drone Gods to create a drone
00:54:57that could accelerate twice as fast as a Formula 1 car,
00:55:01reaching this breakneck speed in just 4 seconds.
00:55:04The drone's top speed is almost 220 mph.
00:55:09Recently, scientists have concluded that water might not be wet.
00:55:13You see, wetness is usually defined as a liquid's ability to maintain contact with a solid surface.
00:55:19It means that the water itself isn't wet, but it can make other objects wet.
00:55:25Okay…
00:55:27The Maldives' 1,000 rufia banknote has captured the attention of people from all over the world
00:55:33and received a lot of praise for its stunning design.
00:55:36The note features the striped pattern of the skin of a majestic whale shark
00:55:40and a green sea turtle against a vibrant blue backdrop.
00:55:44It's already been called the prettiest currency in the world.
00:55:50Now, wearing a tie might be more dangerous than you think.
00:55:53It can reduce blood flow to the brain by 7.5%,
00:55:57making you dizzy and nauseous, and causing headaches.
00:56:00Ties can also increase the pressure in your eyes if it's too tight.
00:56:04Plus, they're great at transporting germs.
00:56:07Gotta think again whether following that dress code is so necessary.
00:56:12A young girl from Washington broke a Guinness World Record
00:56:16by putting on 45 sweaters at a local library.
00:56:19Sophia Hayden pulled on each sweater individually all the way down to her waist
00:56:23before moving on to the next one.
00:56:25It was done to comply with Guinness World Record rules.
00:56:29She also had to make sure that none of those sweaters was ripped
00:56:32since damaged items didn't count.
00:56:34As a result, she broke the record for the most sweaters worn at once.
00:56:39The previous record was 40 sweaters, and it was set by a French 11-year-old boy in 2022.
00:56:45Later, Sophia's mother admitted that it had been tricky
00:56:48to gather enough sweaters for that attempt.
00:56:50The sweaters were then donated to charity.
00:56:53Now, it was Louis XIV of France who is believed to have brought salt and pepper together,
00:56:59forming the basis for modern cooking.
00:57:01At that time, only rich people could afford to add pepper to their meals,
00:57:05and the king liked his food to be lightly seasoned with just salt and pepper.
00:57:14Our Sun produces a sound, but, sadly, we can't hear it.
00:57:18It's emitted in the form of pressure waves,
00:57:21and their wavelength is measured in hundreds of miles.
00:57:24It means they're far beyond the range of human hearing.
00:57:29Now, while we're on the topic of space, let's discuss the fact that
00:57:32our solar system has a wall surrounding it.
00:57:35Well, kind of.
00:57:36It's called the heliotaut.
00:57:38And it's the region of space where solar wind isn't hot enough
00:57:41to push back the wind of particles coming from distant stars.
00:57:45That's why this region is often considered the boundary
00:57:48between the solar system and interstellar space.
00:57:52Another space fact for you.
00:57:54Comets smell like rotten eggs.
00:57:56I know, ew.
00:57:57Other smells that might surround them are those of burning matches and even almonds.
00:58:02That's because of the traces of hydrogen sulfide, ammonia,
00:58:06sulfur dioxide, and hydrogen cyanide found in the makeup of some comets.
00:58:11In 2016, promotional postcards were even made carrying the pungent scent of a comet.
00:58:18Now, in any career field, the average worker is productive
00:58:21for around 60% of their working time each day.
00:58:25But if we talk about office workers, this percentage drops drastically.
00:58:29One study determined that the average office worker is productive
00:58:33for a mere 2 hours and 23 minutes per day.
00:58:36The thing is, employees are interrupted in general every 3 minutes and 5 seconds.
00:58:41And it takes people a whopping 23 minutes to get refocused after an interruption.
00:58:46It means that employees get 3 minutes of work done
00:58:49for every 26 minutes they spend at their workplace.
00:58:52Unbelievable.
00:58:54No wonder that statistically, people working remotely are much more productive.
00:59:00Scottish soccer team Inverness Caledonian Thistle Football Club
00:59:04is known for using cameras with AI ball tracking to livestream their matches on YouTube.
00:59:10Well, once, in a 2020 match against R-United to be precise,
00:59:14when a camera repeatedly tracked an official's bald head,
00:59:18mistaking it for the soccer ball.
00:59:20Uh-oh, what a blunder!
00:59:24Now, speaking of sports, football teams wearing red kits reportedly play better.
00:59:29Accordingly, the color of your attire affects not only how you're perceived by others,
00:59:34but also how you feel.
00:59:36A review of football matches in the past 55 years has shown that teams wearing red
00:59:41consistently play better in home matches than teams dressed in any other color.
00:59:48One more awesome story connected to sports.
00:59:51In order to draw some of the most wanted criminals out of hiding,
00:59:54the U.S. Marshals Service once came up with an offer Crooks couldn't resist.
00:59:59They invited them to the Super Bowl.
01:00:02In December 1985, more than 100 people came to the Washington Convention Center
01:00:07after receiving a letter informing them that they had won tickets to the largest sporting
01:00:12event in the country. According to the invites, they had been selected randomly from a clearinghouse
01:00:18list of D.C. residents and were supposed to receive two tickets to the Redskins vs. Bengals
01:00:23game that day. But to get in, they had to come to a pre-game party to collect their tickets.
01:00:29And guess what? The plan worked like a charm. Over 100 criminals were arrested,
01:00:34which made Operation Flagship one of the most successful in U.S. police history.
01:00:41Now moving on. Your brain is eating itself non-stop. Wait, don't panic yet. It's a totally
01:00:47normal process known as phagocytosis. During this process, cells envelop and consume smaller
01:00:53cells or molecules to remove them from the system. Luckily, phagocytosis isn't harmful.
01:00:59It actually helps preserve your gray matter, keeping it in top shape. Boy, I could use more
01:01:04of that. Giraffes are 30 times more likely to get hit by lightning than people. Between 1996 and
01:01:122010, there were just 5 documented lightning strikes on giraffes that ended tragically.
01:01:17But if we consider the fact that the population of the species was just 140,000 at that time,
01:01:23it makes for around 0.003 lightning casualties per 1,000 giraffes each year. This is 30 times
01:01:31more than the number of tragic accidents involving lightning strikes that happen to people.
01:01:37Animals experience time differently from us humans. To smaller animals, the world around
01:01:43them moves more slowly. For instance, salamanders and lizards experience time not as fast as,
01:01:49let's say, dogs and cats. All because of the perception of time, which depends on how quickly
01:01:55the brain can process incoming information. And finally, snails do have teeth. Between
01:02:021,000 and 12,000 to be precise. These teeth aren't like ours though, so there's no need to
01:02:07picture snails with silly toothy grins. Snails' minuscule teeth are all over their file icons.
01:02:14So there. A flea is probably way faster than you think. It can accelerate more quickly than the
01:02:22space shuttle. A jumping flea can reach dizzying heights of up to 3 inches in only a millisecond,
01:02:28which is insanely fast. Acceleration is the term that stands for a change in speed
01:02:34of a certain object over a period of time. You measure it in Gs. Gravity at Earth's surface
01:02:40creates an acceleration of 1 G, which is 32.2 feet per second squared. The space shuttle
01:02:47accelerated at about 5 G. But when fleas jump, they experience an acceleration of 100 G. The
01:02:54difference is so huge because the flea's body contains a certain type of stretchy rubber-like
01:02:59protein. It allows the insect to store and release energy when it's most needed. Remember
01:03:05those yellow plastic bumps you can see along the edge of a train station platform? We officially
01:03:10call them TGSIs, which stands for Tactile Ground Surface Indicators. They may not look that big,
01:03:17but it takes a crew of workers to install them. First, they need to grind the old yellow line
01:03:23off the platform. Then they temporarily bolt a steel straight edge into place.
01:03:28This helps the workers know where they should drill holes. They need to have a special drilling
01:03:32rig that will create the holes with the proper spacing. Once they complete all the holes,
01:03:37a curious-looking grid appears on the ground. Then the workers start hammering in plastic dimples
01:03:43one by one. These bumps are part of the Platform Edge Warning Surface. Their purpose is to give
01:03:49a warning to vision-impaired people and let them know that they've gotten too close to the edge of
01:03:54a train platform. Lightning has an incredibly high temperature of about 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit,
01:04:01which is five times hotter than the surface of the sun. Generally, it strikes more than 8 million
01:04:07times a day all over the world, which is approximately 93 lightning strikes per second.
01:04:12Despite popular misconception, it is possible for lightning to strike the same place twice.
01:04:17It also tends to aim for objects that are isolated, tall, and pointy. For instance,
01:04:23the Empire State Building gets hit up to 100 times a year. Are you one of those people who
01:04:29associate citrus smells with being clean? That's because in the past, people often used lemons for
01:04:35household cleaning. Its juice contains citric acid that dissolves lime scale and helps bring the
01:04:41shine back to such things as copper pans. That's why people extracted lemon oil from the peel
01:04:46and used it in wood polish. Even after commercial detergents and cream cleaners appeared on the
01:04:52market, people still preferred to add lemon oil for its pleasant scent. Boeing uses potatoes when
01:04:58they're working on improving their in-flight Wi-Fi. You can't make people sit for days at a time
01:05:03while new Wi-Fi systems are being tested, but they still need something that could mimic the
01:05:08conditions of passengers on a flight. So, why not take potatoes? It's a perfect choice because
01:05:14due to their water content and chemistry, these vegetables absorb and reflect radio wave signals
01:05:20the same way our bodies do. You may see lily pads as pretty delicate things that float peacefully on
01:05:26the surface of the water, like leaves. It's hard to believe that such a leaf can support a weight
01:05:31of 70 pounds. It's as much as a large dog, like the Bergamasco Sheepdog or Bernese Mountain Dog,
01:05:37weighs. But if you want a lily pad to hold this weight, you need to distribute it evenly across
01:05:43the surface of the leaf. For example, by placing a sheet of plywood on top of the lily pad. Even a
01:05:49single T-Rex seems rather scary, right? Now, picture 2.5 billion of these fierce dino kings wandering
01:05:56around different locations all over Earth. Scientists believe that's how many of them
01:06:01probably roamed our planet in total. But they didn't all exist at the same time. There have
01:06:06been more than 127,000 generations of these dinosaurs over a couple of million years.
01:06:12Still scary though. The moon is very far away from us. Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter are even farther.
01:06:19The solar system is huge. Our home Milky Way galaxy is even bigger. And don't forget that
01:06:25there are many other galaxies out there that we'll probably never find, even though scientists keep
01:06:30discovering new space objects all the time. But only 5% of the universe is visible. This visible
01:06:37part includes planets, moons, stars, galaxies, and other space bodies. We can't see the rest of it
01:06:43and have no idea what it might look like. A huge part of the universe, more than 70%, consists of
01:06:50dark energy. Dark matter makes up 25%, but that's something people can't detect. Dark matter doesn't
01:06:57interact with ordinary matter. It's also invisible and doesn't emit light or any form of electromagnetic
01:07:04radiation. But scientists believe it exists because of some unusual gravitational effects
01:07:10galaxies and galaxy clusters experience. For example, according to the laws of physics,
01:07:15stars located at the edge of a spinning spiral galaxy are supposed to orbit way more slowly than
01:07:21those that are close to the galactic center. The center of a galaxy is a spot where the largest
01:07:26amount of visible matter is concentrated. But stars travel at approximately the same speed,
01:07:31regardless of their location in the galactic disk. And this only makes sense if you assume
01:07:36that the stars at the edge of a galaxy are under the gravitational effects of some unseen mass.
01:07:43This mass might be hiding in a halo surrounding the galaxy. Did you know people can produce venom?
01:07:49Well, obviously not at the moment, but technically that's something humans could do. All reptiles and
01:07:56mammals are capable of doing that. We mostly see this ability in such creatures as snakes, spiders,
01:08:02or slow lorises, which are the only venomous species of primates we know about.
01:08:07Biologists have found a shared genetic past between venom and saliva, which means that
01:08:12venomous reptiles and mammals have a distant common ancestor. Saliva glands are like empty bowls,
01:08:19while venom glands are those same bowls filled with venom. We're not missing some special
01:08:24mechanisms or genes. We don't have special proteins that could help us fill those bowls.
01:08:29It means that anyone and anything that has salivary glands could potentially become venomous,
01:08:35from mice all the way up to people. There's a reason we all enjoy the smell of rain.
01:08:41This smell even has a special name, petrichor. Water doesn't have any particular smell, but when
01:08:47it rains, the air gets filled with a pleasant aroma. This happens because of special molecules,
01:08:53geosmin, soil-dwelling bacteria create. So you look outside and notice that it's raining.
01:08:59At this moment, small air pockets are forming. They contain tiny amounts of these molecules.
01:09:05The rain first traps and then releases such air pockets. By doing this, it sends these molecules
01:09:11into the air. Then they travel all over the place and produce that trademark rain smell.
01:09:16By the way, rain isn't always droplets of water. It can actually rain fish, frogs,
01:09:22or some other odd things you wouldn't expect to be falling from the sky. Such cases are rare,
01:09:27but they do happen, especially during powerful thunderstorms. Tornado winds can be so powerful
01:09:33that they will propel objects and animals high into the air. And eventually, they all have to
01:09:39go down. One small town in Australia reported hundreds of fish falling from the sky back in
01:09:452010. There are planets out there that don't have regular rains either. On Venus, as well as on some
01:09:52other planets and moons, the rain is made of methane and sulfuric acid. There's even a planet
01:09:575,000 light-years away from us where raindrops are made of iron. Deep within Uranus, Saturn,
01:10:04and Neptune, it might be raining diamonds. It's hard to prove it because the outer planets of
01:10:09our solar system are really difficult to study. But scientists assume that extreme pressure on
01:10:15these planets might crystallize carbon atoms, turning them into diamonds. They go so far as
01:10:20to believe that 2.2 million pounds of diamonds might form on Saturn every year. There's a small
01:10:26town in Norway that is located north of the Arctic Circle. There, the sun doesn't set at all in the
01:10:32period between May 18th and July 26th. That's why the inhabitants of the place want to eliminate
01:10:38the entire concept of time. During that period, it's always light outside and people act accordingly.
01:10:45If you came there and were walking in the middle of the night, let's say at 2 a.m., you could see
01:10:50people playing soccer, mowing lawns, painting their houses, or going for a swim. People can use just a
01:10:57small percentage of the total amount of water on our planet. It's true that about 71% of Earth's
01:11:02surface is covered with water. But we can only use 0.3% of that water. The rest is in ice caps,
01:11:10glaciers, oceans, soil, or floating in the planet's atmosphere. Which means it's not accessible to us.
01:11:17I hate to break this to you, but the sun isn't really yellow. Technically, the light it gives
01:11:22off is white. It's all because of the atmosphere, our atmosphere. There's an effect called Rayleigh
01:11:28scattering. That's when the gases in the atmosphere bend the light. The same effect is the
01:11:33reason why the sky seems to be blue or why sunsets look like a stunning combination of reds and
01:11:39oranges. On a lighter note, if you go into space, you won't immediately be weightless. Scientists
01:11:45mostly agree that space begins where our atmosphere is more or less a vacuum, which is 62 miles up.
01:11:51But it's not like you magically become weightless from the moment you pass that point.
01:11:56Let's say you're in a rocket that's speeding up. You'll definitely feel the gravity of our planet.
01:12:02But you'll feel weightless from the moment you start falling down.
01:12:06To orbit something actually means you're falling forever around that particular object. The Moon
01:12:11is orbiting us. We're orbiting the Sun. Our entire solar system orbits around the center of the
01:12:17Milky Way, our galaxy. That's just a crazy cosmic dance where they're all falling toward one another.
01:12:24So, if you're 250 miles above our planet, you'd have to travel 17,500 miles per hour around the
01:12:31Earth to feel continuous freefall. That's the speed at which the International Space Station
01:12:37and people who work there orbit around our planet. Meanwhile, if you turn the thermostat up high,
01:12:43the rate of heating won't increase. It doesn't put more effort in when you set a higher temperature.
01:12:48For example, if you set the thermostat at 85°F, you won't change the heating speed,
01:12:54only the target temperature. If you set it higher, you might end up wasting more energy,
01:12:59and you'd be too hot. The seven spikes on the Statue of Liberty are not there to represent
01:13:05the seven continents and seven seas, as some previously thought. The spikes stand for sunrays,
01:13:11while the circle is there as some halo. It's like when immigrants arrive on a boat,
01:13:16the statue greets them with, hello and welcome. Do you still believe that summer is so warm
01:13:22because, at that phase, our planet gets closer to the Sun? Well, it's a big fat myth. When it's
01:13:28summer in, say, the Northern Hemisphere, our planet isn't actually closer to the Sun. It's the
01:13:33opposite. The Earth is at its farthest point from the Sun during July and at the closest point during
01:13:39January. Summer is warm because our planet is tilted. During its orbit, the Earth's tilt allows
01:13:46the energy coming from the Sun to hit us more directly because the angle is steeper. Now,
01:13:52anteaters don't eat ants through their nose. They rip open ant hills with their claws and get the
01:13:57ants through the holes with their super long tongues. Those can extend twice as long as their
01:14:02entire heads. The tongues are sticky and covered in tiny spikes, so it's not that hard for them to
01:14:08trap those ants. Anteaters manage to swallow up to 20,000 ants on a daily basis. Now, T-Rex didn't
01:14:16have bad vision. Some research showed that they may have had depth perception even better than
01:14:21today's eagles and hawks do. Also, they weren't as fast as they are in the movies. Based on the
01:14:27structure of their body, they were probably moving no faster than 12 miles per hour. Any quicker than
01:14:32that would damage their bones. But that wasn't a bad thing because the T-Rex would go after
01:14:37dinosaurs way slower than itself most of the time. Ooh, that's one beautiful butterfly! Ooh,
01:14:44don't touch it! It won't be able to fly again. No worries, it's another popular myth. It'll live
01:14:50and still fly if you touch it gently. Butterflies have scales on their wings, which means some might
01:14:56shed off if you touch them. But those scales will shed off naturally anyway. Such sheddable scales
01:15:02may be the reason why they manage to escape when a spider catches them in their web.
01:15:07Now, wolves really don't howl at the moon. It might make a good movie scene, but in real life,
01:15:13they howl because they're active during the night. They look up not to stare at the moon,
01:15:18but because that way, the sound they make will travel better. The rest of the wolves will hear
01:15:23them from distances of 6 to 7 miles away. They howl to communicate with them and even have a
01:15:29special sound they make when they lose their pack. Wolf packs don't necessarily have an alpha
01:15:35leader. When more wolves get together, they get competitive and want to dominate others. So,
01:15:40it might seem one always has to end up as an alpha. But when they're in the wild, they stick
01:15:46with their families to help each other. The elder wolves naturally have higher status, similar to
01:15:51many other animal families. Have you ever heard that giraffes only sleep for half an hour a day?
01:15:58Well, it's false. They sleep approximately 4 and a half hours daily. It's fairly normal
01:16:03amongst animals that are active during the day. They tend to lay down and go to sleep for less
01:16:08than 11 minutes at a time. Crocodylia, the order to which crocodiles and alligators belong,
01:16:15can't run as fast as a racehorse. That's a myth. They can reach up to 12 miles per hour when
01:16:20they're on land, but even when they do, they can't move at such speeds for a long time,
01:16:25maybe 60 to 80 feet before they get tired. A really fast human will move at 12 miles per
01:16:31hour while walking, so many people could outrun a crocodile without even breaking into a run.
01:16:37But it's different when they're in the water, when they move at speeds of more than 20 miles
01:16:42an hour. Trying to out-swim them is probably not a good idea. Crocodylia are not lizards,
01:16:49they're not even related. They may look similar, but these two are completely separate orders.
01:16:55Archosaurs have two lineages, one includes birds and dinosaurs,
01:16:59and another one includes crocodiles. Lizards have nothing to do with them, the snobs.
01:17:05Alligators and crocodiles are basically the same. Here's another myth. They do come from the same
01:17:11family and look pretty similar, but they had their last common ancestor 65 million years ago.
01:17:18That's a long, long time ago, back when the primates diverged from species such as bats.
01:17:23They look similar because they have an excellent body structure to survive.
01:17:27It means evolution didn't have to add or remove anything to change that.
01:17:32Sharks can't smell a single drop of your blood from miles away. They do have a highly developed
01:17:38and enlarged brain area that's in charge of smelling odors, true, that allows some of them
01:17:43to detect very small amounts of blood in the water, like a drop in an Olympic-sized swimming
01:17:48pool. But the ocean is so much bigger and it's not that calm, which means it will take the odor
01:17:55away. Sometimes, though, when the currents are favorable and the day is good, a shark will smell
01:18:01the potential prey from a couple of football fields away, but not miles. Now that thing about
01:18:06sharks can't survive if they stop swimming, that's only partially true. Sharks breathe only
01:18:12when they're swimming because that's when they push water over the gills. That's true for some
01:18:16of the shark species, but there are many others that can pump water over the gills and get oxygen
01:18:21without swimming. For example, bottom-dwelling nurse sharks. Now sharks don't have swim bladders,
01:18:28that means they'll sink to the bottom if they stop swimming. But their bodies are adjusted
01:18:32to such conditions, which means rapid descents or ascents won't really harm them.
01:18:38The asteroid belt isn't that dangerous, at least not like in those movies where
01:18:43spaceships are flying through a dense and chaotic field of rocks smashing into each other.
01:18:48The asteroid belt is a zone that's 200 million to 300 million miles away from the Sun.
01:18:53It's a very isolated and lonely void with a lot of space in between. If you pulled all those
01:18:59asteroids from that belt together, you'd get a mass that's maybe 4% of our Moon. That's why
01:19:05astronauts get really excited when they see just one asteroid smashing into one another. At least
01:19:11something's happening there! Your brain can grow new cells. Well,
01:19:16that's kinda true and false at the same time. Most parts of your brain aren't capable of growing new
01:19:21neurons, but some areas can do it. For example, a part called the hippocampus. It's a very important
01:19:28region of the brain for remembering things, learning, regulating how much we eat, and some
01:19:33other vital biological functions. Many other animal species can regrow brain cells across the whole
01:19:39brain, but that doesn't work for us. Some scientists think it might be because we live longer
01:19:45than many other species, which requires a memory we can depend on. Now, that's why the human brain
01:19:51had to find a way to collect experiences across a long span of years. So, new neurons in the
01:19:58hippocampus, for example, could be there for making new memories and learning new things
01:20:03rather than just remembering the things from the past. Those new brain cells help your brain
01:20:08cultivate your past and use it to chart your future. Or just get yourself an elephant – they
01:20:14never forget! Well, I hate to break this to you, but money isn't actually made of paper. Which
01:20:21also proves that money doesn't actually grow on trees. Most banknotes are 25% linen and 75% cotton,
01:20:29which is why they have such a distinct look and feel. Back in the 19th century,
01:20:33money was made of parchment paper. That's why people could very easily counterfeit it,
01:20:38unlike now. The Eiffel Tower is almost 6 inches taller during the summer.
01:20:43When you heat up some substance, its particles start to move more actively and take up a bigger
01:20:48volume. That's something they call thermal expansion. When the temperature lowers,
01:20:53the substance contracts again. Such an effect is more prominent in gases, but you can also track
01:20:59it in liquids and solids, including iron. Because of this, people build large structures like
01:21:04bridges using expansion joints. They allow a structure some leeway to expand and contract.
01:21:11And such changes don't cause any damage. Wow, I have some pants like that!
01:21:15Now, honey can last for thousands of years without going bad. Bees land on flowers to
01:21:21collect sugary nectar. Then they transport it back to their hive and transfer it to other
01:21:26worker bees. These bees reduce the water content of the nectar by repeatedly drinking and
01:21:32regurgitating the liquid. Mmm, bee barf! Special enzymes in their stomachs break down the glucose
01:21:38in the nectar, and it becomes more acidic. Bees deposit this nectar in the honeycomb
01:21:43and start fanning it with their wings so that the water evaporates more quickly.
01:21:48The honey is now highly acidic and low in water content, which keeps it safe from spoiling.
01:21:53The bacteria that can cause the rest of the food to go off can't survive in such conditions.
01:21:59Now, a long time ago, people didn't elevate their mattresses off the floor.
01:22:03This practice started in ancient Egypt and continued in many other cultures. People realized
01:22:09it was cold on the floor, and they could warm their beds easier if they were off the ground.
01:22:14Houses used to be more drafty. Cold air came in from under the doors. There was no central heating,
01:22:20so people had to find other ways to stay warm. Warm air tends to rise, and if you're positioned
01:22:25higher, you won't be as cold as on the floor. Also, this way, people could keep their beds clean
01:22:31more easily. In simple homes, floors used to be way dirtier than today, and all that dirt usually
01:22:37migrated into beds. Continuing now to talk dirty, do you think people are naturally clean and tidy?
01:22:44After all, our ancestors, who lived thousands of years ago, already used latrines and were
01:22:49tidying their hair with combs. And they kept their homes and themselves clean.
01:22:54Our natural need for hygiene and cleanliness is driven by our sense of disgust. That's the
01:22:59very mechanism that helps our body stay safe and protects them from different infections.
01:23:04That's why we're more sensitive to certain smells and things. But we still have some pretty sloppy
01:23:10habits. For example, eating snacks over a keyboard. Ew! I certainly never do that.
01:23:16But there are animals that are even neater than us humans. For example,
01:23:20rattlesnakes like to keep their surroundings tidy. Some of them even use their muscular
01:23:25necks and triangular heads to sweep aside messy grass when they hunt. Many animals like to clear
01:23:31their path when going after their future meal. Reptiles too. Less vegetation increases their
01:23:37chances of catching food. Songbirds also prefer to keep it neat and get rid of uneaten food,
01:23:43eggshells, and other trash in their nests. This way, they also make their homes less visible to
01:23:49their enemies. Meanwhile, out in space, shadows are darker on the Moon than on our planet. That's
01:23:55because the atmosphere on Earth scatters more sunlight. But if you could visit the Moon,
01:24:00you'd observe shadows so dark you wouldn't be able to see where you were going. Also,
01:24:05you'd notice fresh footprints on the lunar surface. People haven't set foot there in a few decades,
01:24:10but the footprints look as if they were left just yesterday. Since there's no water or wind
01:24:16on the Moon, nothing can erase these footprints. So they stay there in their original form for
01:24:22millions of years. So be careful where you step, huh? Earth's core contains enough gold to coat
01:24:28the entire planet. And if you decided to do this, the level of this precious metal would be knee
01:24:34high. For thousands of years, people have been mining gold and platinum, together with a bunch
01:24:39of other precious metals, from underneath our planet's surface. That's why we have depleted some
01:24:44of the minerals in certain areas. But Earth still has a huge number of such deposits, especially if
01:24:51you get closer to its core. That's because of countless meteorites that collided with our
01:24:56planet during the period of its formation. Those meteorites contain different minerals, including
01:25:01gold. Back then, Earth was still in its molten state, which is why most of the gold, a heavy
01:25:07element, sank deep into its core. And the silicate mantle positioned over the core trapped
01:25:13really huge amounts of gold and some other minerals. Unfortunately, most of them are
01:25:17kind of out of reach now, since we talk about 1,800 miles below the surface and temperatures
01:25:23of thousands of degrees. Too hot, in other words. Sure, if you were about to go into space,
01:25:29one of the first things you'd think of would be your spacesuit. But do you know that it's
01:25:34possible to survive in space even if you aren't wearing any protection? Well, don't get your hopes
01:25:40up yet. It lasts for no more than 15 seconds. That's how long it would take you to lose
01:25:45consciousness, because oxygen will stop coming to your brain. In 1965, one technician accidentally
01:25:52depressurized his suit inside a vacuum chamber. He lost consciousness after 12 to 15 seconds.
01:25:5827 seconds later, his suit luckily got repressurized. The man later said that he
01:26:04remembered the moisture on his tongue started to boil. He also lost his sense of taste,
01:26:09and it didn't come back until 4 days after the accident. Now, you can't hold your breath in
01:26:14space either, so that won't save you. Your lungs will rupture at one point because the air inside
01:26:20will expand. The oxygen in other parts of your body will start to expand too, which means you
01:26:26will balloon up to twice your regular size. Almost like Dudley Dursley's Aunt Marge from
01:26:31Harry Potter. Well, not quite. You won't explode only thanks to your elastic skin. It will keep
01:26:37holding you together. And the liquids in your body will start vaporizing pretty quickly too.
01:26:42Doesn't that sound pleasant? No! The ocean has its iconic blue color thanks to sunlight. When
01:26:49the sun shines, the water absorbs longer orange and red wavelengths of light and reflects shorter
01:26:55blue light waves. This is only possible when there's a huge amount of water. So, the more water
01:27:00you have in one place, the bluer it becomes. That's why the water you pour in your glass
01:27:06has nothing in common with this beautiful ocean blue color. The ocean performs many
01:27:11important functions. For one thing, it produces 50-80% of all the oxygen on our planet,
01:27:17which means it keeps us alive. But it also helps the Internet to function. So, when you're laughing
01:27:24at a funny dog video or binge-watching your favorite series, yep, thank the ocean for that.
01:27:29The majority of the cables that power the Internet, and therefore allow people from all over
01:27:34the world to use it, run underwater. Those are submarine communications cables. Miles and miles
01:27:41of wiring criss-crossing the ocean floor. There are special homes for putting all that in place.
01:27:47They're designed specifically for that purpose. To make sure nothing damages the cables and your
01:27:53Internet, people need to put them on relatively flat stretches of the ocean floor. The cables also
01:27:59need to be away from old shipwrecks or large ocean ecosystems. Some of these cables have a special
01:28:05coating that protects them from damage. This way, no hungry sharks or curious fish have a chance to
01:28:11munch on the wiring. Now, trees talk. Well, not exactly like people do, but they have their own
01:28:17way of communication. Their roots are connected through an underground network of fungi. That
01:28:23network got its name of the wood wide web. Thanks to this network, trees can share resources with
01:28:30one another. That's how they talk. They use these fungi to transmit nutrients and water from one tree
01:28:36to another. For example, there's a mother tree or another tree that's stronger and older than others
01:28:42in the forest, so it shares some of its nutrients and sugars with small trees growing nearby.
01:28:48Thanks, mom! Now look at all these insects flying around on a nice sunny day. Do you think they get
01:28:54sunburned? Well, those that spend most of their time in the open don't. They have dark exoskeletons
01:29:01that contain melanin. That's how they block UV rays. But insects that live underground and in
01:29:06the water, or nocturnal creatures, have paler and thinner skin. If they spend too much time outside
01:29:12during the day, they can indeed get sunburned, or even worse, they could get eaten.
01:29:21Everyone loves a good landmark, the Roman Colosseum, the ancient city of Machu Picchu,
01:29:27the Giza Pyramids. But have you ever wondered how it once looked way back in the days when they were
01:29:33built? Or even in the time they were covered in ivy and forgotten by humanity? Buckle up,
01:29:39because we're heading on a time travel adventure to the world's greatest archaeological sites.
01:29:45Our voyage begins in South America, deep inside the Peruvian mountains. Behold the city of Machu
01:29:52Picchu. Machu Picchu is a monument to the ingenuity and power of the Inca civilization.
01:29:59During its prime, the Inca civilization stretched 2,500 miles along South America's coastline from
01:30:05modern-day Ecuador all the way down to Chile. And Machu Picchu was located at the heart and
01:30:11center of it. The historic site was constructed at around 7,000 feet above sea level, more or less
01:30:17around 1450 BCE. The gated city consisted of around 150 buildings made of stone. The Incas
01:30:25managed to build temples, houses, and even a complex aqueduct system to irrigate the entire
01:30:31town. And yes, they did all that without the help of wheels or any instrument made of iron. The
01:30:38housing model is somewhat similar to stone houses we see nowadays, with the difference that the
01:30:43Incas didn't use any cement to stick together the blocks of stone. Yet, they fit seamlessly on top
01:30:49of each other. Not only that, the Incas must have developed a rudimentary yet effective anti-earthquake
01:30:56technology, since in the event of a quake, the rocks would shake without falling out of place.
01:31:02If Machu Picchu had been built today, it would have cost over 70 million dollars to finish the
01:31:07entire thing. The purpose of the site is still a mystery to many historians. Theories suggest that
01:31:14it could have been built as a ceremonial site, a safety base for the Inca people, or even a retreat
01:31:19for royalty. What we know for a fact is that in the 16th century, 100 years after Machu Picchu was
01:31:26built, its population abandoned it, with tree roots taking over the majority of the site and keeping
01:31:32it hidden from humankind for over four centuries. It wasn't until the 20th century that the world was
01:31:38reintroduced to Machu Picchu, when a Peruvian farmer led Yale University professor Hiram Bingham
01:31:44III to visit the site. Since then, Bingham and many other explorers dedicated their lives and
01:31:51research to studying the archaeological wonder of Machu Picchu. Now, for the next stop on our
01:31:59time-traveling vehicle, the city of Pompeii in Italy. Pompeii has crowded our collective
01:32:05imagination for many years. The eruption of the Mount Vesuvius volcano in 79 AD and the destruction
01:32:12of an entire city is hopefully not something that will happen again. But I bet you're wondering,
01:32:18what did Pompeii look like on its last day? It took 18 hours for Pompeii's streets, markets,
01:32:25houses, and forums to be buried under millions of tons of volcanic ash. Thanks to some clever
01:32:31scientists, we discovered that the lava and ashes that covered Pompeii on its very last day
01:32:36actually helped to freeze the city in time. Different from ice, the cloud of ashes did not
01:32:42preserve the city intact. But as the items disintegrated over 2,000 years, they left voids
01:32:48under the earth. Archaeologists found that if they filled these voids with plaster, the shape of the
01:32:53buried city would soon reveal itself. And that's exactly what happened. Of course, it was nothing
01:33:00like the bustling city of 12,000 people that had existed for many years before the fateful eruption.
01:33:05Pompeii was a vibrant and rich municipality. The site's ruins revealed that many areas of Pompeii
01:33:12boasted impressive houses, some with balconies, which was a sign of great wealth at the time.
01:33:18And believe it or not, even some artwork survived the eruption. Archaeologists found well-preserved
01:33:24frescoes and murals of mythological creatures, all indicating that members of the high society
01:33:29lived there. Ruins show the city even had thermal baths and showers made with luxurious materials.
01:33:36Oh, and apparently, the people of Pompeii had amazing teeth. Yes, archaeologists could see
01:33:42even that tiny level of detail from the plaster molds they recovered from underground.
01:33:48Still in the Italian territory, we find one of the world's biggest tourist attractions,
01:33:53the Roman Colosseum. It was built as an amphitheater during the reign of Emperor Vespasian
01:33:58around 70 A.D. It wasn't until 80 A.D. that Vespasian's son, Emperor Titus, inaugurated the
01:34:06Colosseum. The monument was something to behold, with 157-foot-tall walls, over 80 entrances,
01:34:13and the capacity to host 87,000 people. All social classes and groups were welcome at the Colosseum,
01:34:19and this partly explains why it flourished for so many centuries.
01:34:24During the decline of the Roman Empire, around the 6th century A.D., the Colosseum started being
01:34:29neglected and abandoned. The monument was looted, and some of its columns and stones were used to
01:34:36build infrastructure elsewhere. Only one-third of the original Colosseum still remains, and,
01:34:42if it's big now, imagine what it once was. Greece was home to one of the world's largest empires.
01:34:49At the height of this empire, literally and historically speaking, more or less 2,400 years
01:34:54ago, the Greeks built a citadel known as the Acropolis. The Acropolis, which is composed
01:35:00of historical buildings, is considered to be one of the biggest landmarks of Western civilization
01:35:06to date. Tourists that visit the capital city of Athens today may be faced with yellowish and
01:35:11broken pillars of the Parthenon standing way up high in one of the city's hills. But way back
01:35:17when it was built, between 447 and 432 BCE, the imposing and majestic Parthenon was purely white
01:35:25as the entire monument was built with gleaming white marble. The statues inside were made of
01:35:30gold. The Parthenon is a 23,000 square foot temple held up by 69 marble columns. The largest blocks
01:35:38of marble are massive, weighing around 10 tons each. And the most surprising fact is that the
01:35:45marble didn't come from Athens, but from a nearby site that stood 10 miles from the Acropolis,
01:35:51known as Mount Pentelikon. Historians intrigued by where the primary material for building the
01:35:57Acropolis came from, found tiny and big blocks of marble all scattered around the floor of Mount
01:36:02Pentelikon. There was also a paved road that the Greeks had built to carry the rocks around.
01:36:08But perhaps the most impacting monument of all times is located at the heart of the Middle East,
01:36:14outside the Egyptian city of Cairo. The pyramids are considered one of the seven wonders of the
01:36:20ancient world. The Giza pyramid complex was built as a tomb for the pharaoh Khufu around 4,500 years
01:36:27ago. Between 20,000 to 30,000 people took part in the construction process. It's composed of three
01:36:34pyramids. The massive monument is made out of approximately 8,000 tons of granite
01:36:40and over 550,000 tons of mortar, which gives it the appearance it has today. Would you believe
01:36:47me if I told you that the pyramids didn't always look like this? Far from it. They were shiny white
01:36:53with a golden triangular tip at the top. This is because the Egyptians used over 6 million tons of
01:36:59limestone to cover the entire rocky, step-like structure, all so that they could gleam white
01:37:05under the unforgiving sunlight of Egyptian skies. The Pyramid of Khufu remained the tallest
01:37:10structure on Earth made by humans for over 3,800 years. It was the only eight-sided pyramid in
01:37:17Egypt and was believed to align with Orion's belt. It's considered to be the most aligned
01:37:22construction facing north. In 1979, it was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
01:37:30Let's head on down to the Indian city of Agra to quickly visit the Taj Mahal. You may know it as
01:37:35the Taj, but it can also be called by its more endearing name, a teardrop in the cheek of time.
01:37:42The Taj took over 22 years to build and was commissioned in 1632 by Mughal emperor Shah
01:37:49Jahan as a declaration of love for his third and favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. It was made with
01:37:56ivory-white marble, and amazingly, due to tight conservation, it still remains very similar to
01:38:02what it was when it was built. I think all this talk of landmarks got me thirsty for some traveling.
01:38:08What about you? Tell us in the comments below if you've ever visited some of these sites
01:38:13or which interesting landmarks you'd add to this video.
01:38:16Braces for dogs, unimaginably colorful shrimps, fireworks spitting fish. The animal kingdom is
01:38:23full of surprises that prove that nature has the most inventive mind. A single strand of hair can
01:38:30hold up to three ounces, meaning theoretically, all the hair on your head could hold the weight
01:38:35of two full-grown elephants. Some snails can sleep for up to three years, but they usually get
01:38:44in 13 to 15-hour snoozes and wake up with a 30-hour boost of energy. Periodical cicadas come
01:38:51out of their underground shelters every 13 or 17 years. This is a biological adaptation so that no
01:38:58other animal can depend on them as a food source. Most animals' lifespans are shorter. Scientists
01:39:05theorize that early humans lost their fur so they wouldn't overheat while hunting. We instead
01:39:11evolved to store fat to keep warm, which is why your head is covered in long, thick hair. There's
01:39:17no fat on your scalp. Dogs can wear braces to fix their teeth, just like humans. And you might not
01:39:24believe it, but this invention has existed for over 30 years now. Dogs can also have dental
01:39:30fillings if they chipped one of their teeth in case of cavities and crowns. The smallest monkey
01:39:37in the world, the pygmy marmoset, could hug your thumb like a tree trunk. Owls are the birds able
01:39:44to see the color blue, and they don't exactly have eyeballs like humans. Theirs are more like eye
01:39:50tubes since they can't move inside the eye socket like your eyes. An owl must rotate its whole head.
01:39:58Butterflies feel smells with their feet, snakes with their tongues, and octopuses with their arms.
01:40:06Blind mole rats live underground and send each other information by banging their heads on the
01:40:10tunnel walls. Reindeers change their eye color depending on the season. Their eyes are golden
01:40:18in the summer and blue in the winter. Bees show the location of pollen source to other bees with
01:40:25a waggle dance. The fastest registered human punch is 45 miles per hour. A mantis shrimp strikes at
01:40:3550 miles per hour. These creatures also have 16 light-sensitive cones in their eyes against
01:40:42our three, and thanks to that they can see colors unimaginable for us humans.
01:40:47They're very colorful too, even to our eyes, and how they see each other is beyond our wildest
01:40:53fantasies. Pistol shrimps, however, beat their relatives in power because they close their big
01:40:59right claw with such speed that it creates a white hot air bubble underwater, and it's literally
01:41:05hot. The temperature of this tiny bubble momentarily reaches almost that of the surface of the sun.
01:41:13The oldest tree we know is called Methuselah. It's 4,700 years old. This thing was a sapling
01:41:20in the 27th century BCE. Dolphins sleep with one half of their brain resting while the other
01:41:27remains alert. Horses have one heart like you and me, but they have a heart-like organ at the bottom
01:41:35of each foot called a frog. It pumps blood up the leg every time the horse stands on it.
01:41:43Many types of seahorses are similar to chameleons, not only because of their ability to change color,
01:41:49but also in that their two eyes move independently from each other. Some seahorses can't change color
01:41:56at will, but they're born with color to blend with their habitat. For example, red for coral or green
01:42:03for algae. Baby flamingos are grayish-white. Algae and seafood they feed on contains a substance
01:42:12called carotenoids, and thanks to it, over time, flamingos acquire pink plumage. It's the same
01:42:19substance that's present in carrots, and your skin can turn orange too if you eat too much of it.
01:42:25The black and white color of a zebra doesn't help it hide from predators. What it does is help avoid
01:42:31bites from dangerous insects, such as tsetse fly. A fly sees a zebra, but when approaching, it flies
01:42:37by or crashes into the animal and bounces off. Nobody knows exactly why this happens. One theory
01:42:43says that the black and white coat of a zebra creates an optical illusion that confuses insects.
01:42:49Thanks to their tallness and good eyesight, giraffes can see danger approaching from afar.
01:42:55Their head is like a watchtower, and they warn each other of the threat in a very unusual way
01:43:00with the help of their low humming sound. Seagulls can drink salt water. There are salt-secreting
01:43:09glands near their eyes. These glands purify seawater very quickly, and the salty residue
01:43:15that comes out through the nostrils. Perhaps the most impossible creature in the world is a
01:43:21jellyfish. It doesn't have any sensory organs we're used to, like eyes, ears, and nose. It has
01:43:27no skeleton, but most importantly, it hasn't got a brain or a heart. Its body is almost entirely
01:43:35made of water. That's why if you take a jellyfish out of the sea and put it on the shore, it will
01:43:40soon melt. At the same time, there's a species of jellyfish that can live forever in a safe
01:43:46environment. Horseshoe crabs have two eyes on the sides of their head, five more on top of their
01:43:54shell, two near their mouth, and one on the tail. The latter is used as a photoreceptor.
01:44:00It catches the sunlight and tells the crab if it's day or night outside.
01:44:04Hippos don't get their skin burned in the blazing sun because they produce their own sunscreen.
01:44:10It's kind of pink sweat that covers their whole body. Kangaroo rats can go without water for
01:44:17years and sometimes even throughout their entire lives. They live in extremely arid deserts and
01:44:23get all the water they need from the seeds and plants they feed on. Plumed basilisk lizards have
01:44:30an uncanny ability to run on water. First, their hind feet are equipped with long toes with fringes
01:44:37of skin that can spread out in the water. As a result, a bigger surface of the lizard's foot
01:44:43comes into contact with the water. Then it pumps its legs incredibly fast when it runs on water.
01:44:49This creates little pockets of air that prevent the animal from drowning by keeping it on the
01:44:54surface. The cardinal fish has been called firework spitting for a reason. When this little
01:45:01critter guzzles too many ostracods, a type of zooplankton, the tiny creatures start to glow
01:45:06inside the fish's body due to their bioluminescence. As a result, the cardinal fish becomes more visible,
01:45:13exposing it to predators. That's why the fish spits the ostracods out, which looks like it
01:45:18breathes outbursts of bluish fire. Opossums are immune to snake venom. The secret is a peptide
01:45:27that helps these critters neutralize dangerous chemicals. This is why snakes are a favorite treat
01:45:32on opossum's diet. Meerkats have dark patches around their eyes, but these black circles aren't
01:45:39just there to make the critters more adorable. They also function as built-in sunglasses.
01:45:45The dark fur on the patches blocks the blazing sun, so meerkats can gaze directly at the sky.
01:45:52On top of that, the sentry, a meerkat that watches out for birds and other predators,
01:45:57can easily see danger and alert its mates. Salmon are skilled navigators who could put most drivers
01:46:04to shame. However, this competition wouldn't be fair. After all, salmon can sense the planet's
01:46:10magnetic field and use this knowledge if they get lost. Dingoes have rotating wrists, just like
01:46:17humans. This helps them climb trees, use their paws like hands to catch food, and even open doors.
01:46:25Sponge crabs are the icons of style in the animal kingdom. They dig and cut into sea sponges to make
01:46:32their very own hats. The purpose of this hat is protective though. Sponge crabs use them to hide
01:46:38from predators and protect themselves against bites. Flying squirrels glow under UV light,
01:46:45emitting pink light. It happens because they can absorb light and emit it back in another wavelength.
01:46:53Yo-ho-ho! A pirate's life for me! Let me stop you right there. If you think being a pirate or a
01:46:59sailor back in the old days was so cool, here's the harsh truth. It was not all about singing
01:47:06sea shanties and embarking on epic voyages across the seven seas to find the fountain of youth or
01:47:12caves filled with gold. It wasn't actually that cool being at sea all the time, and I have five
01:47:18compelling reasons to prove you some. Let's dive in, pun intended. Now imagine this. You're so
01:47:26excited. You've been waiting for this day to come, and finally it's official. You're going to become
01:47:31a real sailor. The captain tells you to get ready because the next day you're going to set sail on a
01:47:37journey that is expected to take somewhere around six months, if you're lucky that is, because
01:47:43storms and singing mermaids could complicate things. You pack a few things. Now let's pause this daydream
01:47:51for a quick second because here comes problem number one. What I mean by packing a few things
01:47:56is just the clothes on your back. Sailors would only have one set of clothes that they almost
01:48:02never washed during the entire voyage. That's because they believed that dirt and grease would
01:48:07protect them from winds and rains. Okay, back to the thought experiment. You kiss your family goodbye
01:48:14and head to the port where your new home is waiting. One of your crew members not so warmly
01:48:19welcomes you on the deck and shows you where you'll be sleeping. This makes you start doubting your
01:48:25choice of becoming a sailor in the first place because after seeing it you're certain that this
01:48:30is not going to be a five-star hotel comfort level kind of experience. So here's problem number two.
01:48:39The ships were absolutely crammed. Back in the day sailors would have to accept living in such
01:48:45conditions whether they were working for a big name like Christopher Columbus or not. The Niña
01:48:51and the Pinta were two of Columbus's ships and the best sailing vessels of their time.
01:48:56Yet again this didn't change the fact that they were so small that men had no place to sleep.
01:49:02Which gives us problem number three. Having to sleep next to one another on a crowded deck where
01:49:08they could barely move was not so great for sailors health conditions and going below deck to escape
01:49:14the snoring of their fellow shipmates was not an option because there was no fresh air there.
01:49:19In addition you could always come across a rat there so kiss personal hygiene goodbye and in case
01:49:26you're wondering how rats got there those little rascals are actually good swimmers. Also sailors
01:49:32were at sea no matter the season or the weather so they were often cold and wet which also made
01:49:38it hard for them to stay healthy and strong. Speaking of health conditions brings us to
01:49:44problem number four and it's food and hunger. Sailors didn't have their own mini fridges with
01:49:50different kinds of condiments back then like the compartments luxury cruises have these days so
01:49:56they had to come up with ways to store enough food that would last for months or even years.
01:50:02Due to that their food options were limited. It definitely wasn't like the food prepared by
01:50:07Michelin star chefs. One of the most common food options on ships was salted meat which wasn't as
01:50:14chewy as you might imagine or a biscuit called hardtack also called sheet iron or worm castles
01:50:21and there's a reason for all these creative nicknames. Hardtack was essentially a mix of
01:50:27water and flour baked into a cardboard flavored cracker. They were brick like and the only way
01:50:33they could be eaten was if they were softened with water. If only sailors could dip them in their
01:50:39afternoon tea right? Sometimes these biscuits would still be extremely dense then sailors would
01:50:45have to slam their fists down on them to break them into smaller pieces to be able to eat the
01:50:50stuff. As long as hardtack was kept dry it rarely got spoiled. The sailors would be able to eat them
01:50:57after a year if they had any left but most of the time it would be extremely hard to keep them dry
01:51:03inside wooden casks and then they would get infested with bugs that would leave small holes
01:51:08behind. However sailors would still eat them anyway, have to take protein from somewhere.
01:51:15By now you might have figured out that there were no fruits or vegetables in a sailor's diet.
01:51:20This caused vitamin deficiency in many sailors. So those toothless pirates and sailors in the
01:51:26movies you see? Yep it's all because of poor nutrition and the iron hard crackers probably
01:51:32didn't help either. But when sailors ran out of food not having a balanced diet was probably the
01:51:39least of their concerns. Back in the old times a voyage could take way longer than expected due to
01:51:45weather conditions. There could be no winds to push the ship further or a powerful storm could shake
01:51:52the ship and the waves and water could destroy the food storage. So when such a situation happened
01:51:58sailors could easily run out of food. Well they could throw the net into the ocean and catch some
01:52:04fish right? But sailors didn't eat fish even in the face of starvation. Many captains mentioned
01:52:10this in their log books which were basically captains diaries. The problem was not that sailors
01:52:15couldn't get fish. In fact many different kinds of fish were caught in their nets but they had to
01:52:20throw them all back into the sea. During the exploration era Antonio Pigafetta mentioned in
01:52:27his log book that the ship's crew caught an unbelievable amount of fish but they didn't eat
01:52:33any of them. Also in the same journal he mentioned that 40 of the sailors lost their lives. Naturally
01:52:40sailors thought that only poisonous fish were dangerous and because of that they were inclined
01:52:45to eat only the fish they knew. But even a well-cooked tuna could be poisonous and they had
01:52:51to learn it the hard way. But it's not like they didn't have any methods to check fish. Spanish
01:52:57sailors for example put silver coins on it. If the silver changed color they considered those fish to
01:53:03be poisonous therefore inedible. So they would toss them overboard. Other sailors would place the fish
01:53:11they caught on the deck and observe if flies or other insects came to feast on it. If they didn't
01:53:16land on the fish this meant that it was poisonous but if insects did come they considered it safe to
01:53:22eat. The problem of eating fish caught in the open sea dates back to as early as the 7th century BCE.
01:53:30Imperial healers in ancient China knew that eating fish was the reason why some sailors
01:53:35lost their lives. But they couldn't prove that the fish were poisonous and the mystery remained
01:53:41unsolved up until the 19th century. In 1886 a Cuban doctor finally figured out that some fish
01:53:48contained poison in their tissues and muscles even though they were considered a safe to eat breed.
01:53:55That kind of poison is actually something that is found in plankton. Some fish can eat this
01:54:00plankton without being affected. They store it in their bodies and as they grow the rate of the
01:54:06poison increases within them and this is something that doesn't go away no matter how long one cooks
01:54:12the fish. If you still think that life at sea back in the old days sounds exciting this fifth problem
01:54:19will convince you otherwise. Let's say you've managed to get along with your roommates, stay
01:54:25clean and healthy and eat regularly. But there's always a risk of getting caught by pirates and
01:54:32they didn't ask for things kindly. So if you didn't want to end up as food for sharks you
01:54:38would have to raise the white flag and simply join them. Not the career you were planning right?
01:54:48Good luck scrubbing the deck for the rest of your life!
01:54:56So get this if someone managed to uncoil all the DNA in the human body
01:55:01it would stretch out to around 10 billion miles. Hey do the math! That's twice the distance from
01:55:07Earth to Pluto. And that's not the only awesome thing our body is capable of.
01:55:12Trillions of nerve connections are powering your memory non-stop. According to studies,
01:55:17after looking at two and a half thousand images for a mere three seconds most people can recall
01:55:23if they have seen these pictures with 92% accuracy. Wow! Your body glows emitting tiny
01:55:30amounts of fairly visible light. This glow is the product of biochemical reactions going on
01:55:35inside your organism. The light waxes and wanes throughout the day. But even though it is visible,
01:55:41you can't detect it with the unaided eye. From 1 to 6 pounds of your body weight is made up of
01:55:48bacteria. And from 100 million to 1 billion bacteria can live on just one tooth in your mouth.
01:55:55So please brush. It's impossible to taste your food without saliva. All because the chemicals
01:56:01in your food must be dissolved in saliva before they get detected by your taste buds.
01:56:07Even though it sounds like a myth, eating too many carrots can indeed turn your skin orange.
01:56:13Carrots have high amounts of beta-carotene. That's a compound that can cause keratinemia.
01:56:18If you have too much of this compound in your bloodstream, it'll hold onto parts of your body
01:56:23with thicker skin. I'm talking about the soles of your feet, your knees, elbows, palms,
01:56:28and even certain areas around your nose. But worry not, this condition is not dangerous.
01:56:34You can easily reverse it by decreasing the amount of beta-carotene-filled food you consume.
01:56:40The chin muscles, scientifically known as the mentalis muscles, look pretty quirky,
01:56:45giving us mixed feelings. Just look at these creepy tiny tentacles. And still,
01:56:50they make it possible for us to create all kinds of facial expressions
01:56:53that involve the lips, chin, and cheeks. And yes, they are the culprits behind those weird wrinkles
01:57:00and crevices on the skin of your chinny-chin-chin. All because these muscles don't pull on themselves,
01:57:06but yank on the skin. People can live without some organs,
01:57:10leading a normal life. The human body consists of singular organs and those that come in pairs.
01:57:16And speaking of the latter, you'll only need one of those to survive.
01:57:20Your small intestine is actually not so small. It's taller than you, measuring around 23 feet.
01:57:28The cornea, that transparent front cover on your eyes, doesn't have any blood supply. Instead,
01:57:33it receives oxygen directly from the air. Human beings develop their unique fingerprints
01:57:39very early in life, while they're still embryos, just 3 months after being conceived.
01:57:44By the way, even if fingerprints get badly damaged, they tend to grow back to their
01:57:48original pattern. All people are born with a diving reflex. It can get activated and
01:57:54shut bodily functions if one is drowning or is submerged in the water. The human brain
01:58:00is by no means smooth. But if you decided to flatten all those wrinkles covering it,
01:58:05the brain would be the size of a pillowcase. But not as useful.
01:58:10Newborn babies only blink once or twice in a minute. For comparison, a grown-up person blinks
01:58:15at least 10 times within the same time. Our lungs are the only organs that can float on the water.
01:58:21All because they're made up of around 300 million balloon-like structures called alveoli.
01:58:27Also, even if we're perfectly healthy, our lungs are never completely germ-free or sterile.
01:58:33Your nose is a superhero! It's your very own heater, filter, and humidifier. This organ is
01:58:39lined with tiny bone-like shells called turbinates. They contain blood vessels capable of heating the
01:58:45air and goblet cells that can help humidify the air. Also, the air you breathe gets filtered in
01:58:50your nose before going further to your lungs. Now, every time you eat something, your esophagus,
01:58:57the organ your food travels through to reach the stomach, moves in a series of wave-like
01:59:02contractions, pushing the food forward. This is known as peristalsis.
01:59:08There's a bond between your digestive system and your brain, the gut-brain axis. This is why
01:59:13stress or brain issues can affect the way your body digests food. Now, even though hiccups are
01:59:19typically harmless and resolve by themselves after a couple of minutes, they aren't exactly
01:59:24pleasant. So, you should probably know that they might occur because of changes in temperature.
01:59:30The density of your brain increases throughout your whole life. All because new neural
01:59:35connections pop up. They appear because the structure of the brain keeps changing too.
01:59:41If you don't want to sneeze, press the skin on the bridge of your nose with your fingers.
01:59:45When you do it, your brain receives an alarm signal. Very quickly, it puts the brake on all
01:59:50those other processes, including the sneezing reflex. By the way, studies have found that
01:59:56sneezing is your nose's way to reset. A sneeze reboots the cells that line the inside of your
02:00:02nose. They're called cilia. The part of your brain that's responsible for vision is in the
02:00:08back of your head. Interestingly, the right side of your brain controls the vision on the left side,
02:00:13and vice versa. If you're in some loud place, for example, in a club or at a concert,
02:00:20close your ears to better hear your friends. Push the tragus, which is that pointy skin-covered
02:00:26cartilage in front of the ear canal, into your ear. Then turn this ear toward your friend.
02:00:32On average, when a person snores, the sound doesn't get louder than 60 decibels. That's
02:00:37as loud as a regular conversation. But sometimes, the noise level can reach 80 decibels. That's
02:00:43as loud as a working food blender. Just like salamanders regrow their tails,
02:00:49humans might be able to regenerate cartilage. That's the rubber-like stuff surrounding your
02:00:53joints. Scientists have recently discovered that cartilage could repair itself. This process is
02:00:59likely to be the most effective at the ankle, not that effective in the knee, and the least
02:01:04effective in the hip. If a person has asnosmia, which is also called smell blindness, they don't
02:01:11distinguish and detect smells. Your eyes never stop moving while taking in visual information.
02:01:18Otherwise, you wouldn't be able to see the whole picture. These movements go unnoticed
02:01:23because your brain is a great video editor. It stabilizes the images and connects tons
02:01:27of fragments into one smooth video. The liver is the only human organ that
02:01:34can regenerate completely. Even if it's a mere 25% of the original liver weight,
02:01:39the organ can get back to its full size. Your mouth burns when you're snacking on
02:01:45pineapple because while you're eating this fruit, it's eating you back. Well, kind of.
02:01:50Pineapple is the only known food that contains bromelain. That's an enzyme
02:01:54that breaks down proteins. Luckily, your stomach acid knows how to deal with the offending enzyme.
02:02:01Now, we also have bacteria that can produce electricity living in our intestines.
02:02:06These bacteria give off electrons, which creates tiny electrical currents.
02:02:10This might be the bacteria's way to generate energy.
02:02:14Deja vu might actually be something like a brain processing lag.
02:02:21There's a theory claiming that it might happen when your brain is moving information from one
02:02:26part to another. If there's even the tiniest delay in that process, your brain will get
02:02:31the same information twice. In this case, it'll process it as an event that happened before.
02:02:37The DEC2 gene mutation allows people to have just a few hours of sleep a night
02:02:42and still feel great. They don't get tired and never sleep in. On average,
02:02:47such people wake up at 4 or 5 a.m. No more than 5% of the world's population has this feature.
02:02:55Your ears might pop or even hurt when you're on an airplane.
02:02:59You can solve this problem by simply chewing some gum. This opens up your eustachian tube.
02:03:05That's a small passage that connects your throat and your middle ear.
02:03:08Opening this passage helps equalize the pressure in your ears and puts an end to the popping.
02:03:13You can also yawn to open up the eustachian tubes.
02:03:17Your feet are likely to become bigger with time. Just like your nose. And your ears.
02:03:22You see, when people grow older, ligaments and tendons in their feet weaken.
02:03:26This makes the arches flatter, and the feet become wider and longer.
02:03:32That's it for today, so hey, if you pacified your curiosity, then give the video a like
02:03:37and share it with your friends. Or if you want more,
02:03:39just click on these videos and stay on the Bright Side!

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