
Live Science
If you're looking for weird facts about animals, gross human body facts or just something a bit random, get ready to geek out with these fascinating bits of trivia.
It's time to blow your mind with cool science facts.
The world is a mysterious place, which gives Live Science plenty of material for our popular Life's Little Mysteries series that runs every weekend. We've been writing mysteries since 2004, and we still haven't run out of weird things to cover. Each mystery comes with a multitude of facts, like which animals are evolving the fastest and why Australia has so many venomous animals.
Honestly, we could go on, but we'd have to link to our thousands of mysteries. So, for your geeking-out pleasure, we've pulled out 60 of the most impressive facts here.
60. The oldest river in the world is Australia's Finke River, which formed between 300 million and 400 million years ago.
59. Emeralds are rarer than diamonds, at least when it comes to what's inside the world's known mines.
58. You usually don't see your nose because your brain cancels it out.
57. The oldest known boat is 10,000 years old, but humans probably invented watercraft by at least 60,000 years ago on the journey to Australia.
56. Stomach acid can burn through metal, but it doesn't burn through our bodies because of a thick, sticky layer of mucus in the stomach that's alkaline and buffers the acid.

55. Cat paw pads, also known as toe beans, are so good at cushioning falls, scientists studied them to create better footwear for paratroopers.
54. Earth will likely last a total of 9.5 billion years, but most planets orbit red dwarf stars, meaning they'll last much longer — possibly up to trillions of years.
53. The largest possible earthquake is most likely around 9.5 magnitude, but there's a very slight chance one could be bigger.
52. Rainbows are not really arches; they're circles. You can see the full circle from a high vantage point, such as an airplane or a mountaintop.
51. It's natural for deserts to form next to oceans, and this can make deserts very foggy.
50. Until the 1960s, researchers thought people largely dreamed in black and white.
49. Pumpkins are a type of berry (and a very big one).
48. Evacuating your bowels stimulates the vagus nerve, which can lower your blood pressure and heart rate — no wonder it feels so good to poop.
47. Iceland used to be the only country in the world without mosquitoes, but that changed in October 2025.
46. If a human could fly with wings, they would need to have a wingspan of about 20 feet (6 m) to have any chance of gliding through the air.

45. Leaving the pit in doesn't technically delay the browning process of an entire avocado; it just prevents oxygen from browning the bit underneath it.
44. At about 1,300 feet (400 m) below sea level, the banks of the Dead Sea are Earth's lowest point on dry land.
43. During the adolescent growth spurt, some teenagers can grow as much as 4 to 5 inches (10 to 13 centimeters) in a single year.
42. Black holes are dark because they trap light that crosses the event horizon, which means if you were to enter one, it would actually be extremely bright.
41. Your brain can take 15 to 30 minutes to reach full cognitive capacity after you wake up, a period known as "sleep inertia."
40. When sea levels were lower during the last ice age, North America and Asia were joined by an enormous land bridge. A similar bridge enabled the ancestors of Tyrannosaurus rex to trek from Asia to North America around 68 million years ago.
39. The slowest-moving land animal is likely the banana slug, which moves at the extremely leisurely pace of 0.006 mph (0.0096 km/h), or a tenth of an inch per second (2.7 millimeters per second). By comparison, the common garden snail glides along at a relatively speedy 0.03 mph (0.048 km/h), or half an inch per second (1.3 centimeters per second).
38. Although rare, in certain circumstances, women were allowed to compete as gladiators in ancient Rome, but there are no records of any of them dying in battle.

37. The sound of the supermassive black holes in the Perseus cluster burping out gas would hit a low B flat, some 57 octaves below middle C.
36. All newts are salamanders, but not all salamanders are newts.
35. Even though the Colorado River toad releases the chemical 5-MeO-DMT — one of the most potent psychedelics around — from poison glands in its head, you can't get high by licking it.
34. The 1883 eruption of Krakatau is often considered the loudest sound in history, with people 1,900 miles (3,000 kilometers) away hearing the blast.
33. The oldest known human in the genus Homo lived in Africa around 2.8 million years ago, but we're not sure which species it is.
32. The largest known prime number contains 41,024,320 digits.
31. Frogs breathe and drink through their skin.
30. A bullet fired from a 223 Remington leaves the weapon at up to 2,727 mph (4,390 km/h) — fast enough to cover 11 football fields in a single second.
29. A turtle's shell is made of 50 bones.
28. Despite what you may have seen in the movies, ancient Egyptians did not booby-trap the pyramids.
27. The world's longest undersea section of a tunnel belongs to the Channel Tunnel, which has a 23.5-mile (37.9 kilometers) underwater section connecting England and France.

26. Despite evidence to the contrary, Christopher Columbus continued to claim the lands he "discovered" were parts of Asia, likely so he'd get paid.
25. The primary mirror on the James Webb Space Telescope is 21.3 feet (6.5 meters) in diameter, giving it a total collecting area of more than 270 square feet (25 square m).
24. As of March 2025, there were 953 known natural satellites in the solar system (depending on your definition of a moon).
23. There are roughly 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 atoms in the observable universe. (That’s an octillion.)
22. It takes five to 10 years for a body in a coffin to completely decompose down to a skeleton.
21. The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation is a web of ocean currents that loop through the Atlantic Ocean, moving 600 million cubic feet (17 million cubic meters) of water per second and 1.2 petawatts of heat — roughly the same amount of heat put out by a million power plants running at the same time.

20. The deepest place on Earth is the bottom of the Mariana Trench, which lies about 35,876 feet (10,935 meters) below the surface. That makes it about 7,000 feet (2,100 m) deeper than Mount Everest is tall.
19. Researchers have shown that octopuses can be fooled by a version of the "rubber hand illusion," by stroking a real octopus arm hidden from view and a visible fake octopus arm at the same time. When the fake arm was pinched, the octopus reacted as if its own arm had been attacked — by changing color or pulling back.
18. The asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs hit Earth at 27,000 mph (43,000 km/h).
17. Roughly half of all eukaryotic species on Earth are insects.
16. Mount Everest is only the tallest mountain by altitude, at 29,031.69 feet (8,848.86 m) above sea level. If you measure Mauna Kea, an inactive volcano in Hawaii, from base to peak, it's actually taller, at 33,497 feet (10,211 m) in altitude.

15. You're more likely to cry when chopping an onion with a dull knife than with a sharp one.
14. Antarctica became a continent around 34 million years ago, after losing its land connections with Australia and South America.
13. Jellyfish, sea anemones and hydras don't have brains, yet they're capable of surprisingly advanced behavior.
12. Kangaroos have three vaginas.
11. Many shark species will become temporarily paralyzed if you turn them upside down.
10. The human heart has incredible stamina, beating around 100,000 times and pumping roughly 2,500 gallons (9,500 liters) of blood daily, on average.
9. Dragonflies are one of nature's most effective hunters, catching prey up to 97% of the time. By comparison, tigers have a success rate of only 10%.

8. Yes, some figs really do have wasps in them.
7. Training OpenAI's GPT-4 used an estimated 50 gigawatt-hours of energy — enough to power San Francisco for three days.
6. The oldest DNA sequenced from animals and plants is from 2.4 million years ago.
5. On average, a person produces about 30 to 91 cubic inches (500 to 1,500 cubic centimeters) of gas every day, regardless of their diet. Thankfully, over 99% of those gases are odorless.
4. A female puff adder holds the record for the most offspring born in one live-birth pregnancy — a whopping 156 fully developed snakelets.
3. The record for the most times a piece of paper has been folded in half is 12. If you were to fold it 42 times, it would be more than 273,280 miles (439,800 kilometers) high — more than the average distance between Earth and the moon.
2. It is possible to turn a different element into gold, just not a lot of it.
1. The most-cited number of organs in the human body is 78, and the heaviest organ is the skin.

In 1558, the French court was the most glamorous place on earth. But one woman didn't just walk into the room. She commanded it from nearly six feet in the air.
Mary, Queen of Scots was a physical anomaly for her time. During the 16th century, the average woman stood barely five feet tall. Mary towered at 5 feet 11 inches.
She was more than just a royal. She was a presence that could not be ignored. With her red-gold hair and amber eyes, she was the visual definition of majesty.
But her height was more than a cosmetic trait. In the brutal world of 1500s politics, it was a psychological weapon. She looked down on the very men who tried to control her.
Imagine the scene in Edinburgh. Mary was just six days old when she inherited the crown of Scotland. She was a child queen in a world that chewed up the weak.
But she didn't break. She survived the intrigue of France and the cold winters of Scotland. She navigated the treacherous waters of power with a charm that masked her iron will.
She saw the betrayal of her husbands. She saw the jealousy of her rivals. She saw the walls of her prison closing in.
Her cousin, Elizabeth I, was one of the most powerful women in history. Yet Elizabeth refused to meet Mary in person for decades. Some believe it was because the Scottish Queen’s physical presence was simply too overwhelming.
Mary spent nineteen years in captivity. Even in her darkest hours, she kept the posture of a sovereign. She never allowed her spirit to be shorter than her stature.
Her life ended on the executioner's block in 1587. Even then, she faced her end with a dignity that haunted her enemies for years after she was gone.
Today, we remember her as a tragic figure. But we should remember her as the woman who stood taller than the age she lived in.
She represented a strength that couldn't be quantified by a crown. She was a giant among kings.

In 1789, a French girl’s parents were so terrified of her passion for math that they took away her candles and her clothes just to keep her in bed. By 1816, she was the first woman to ever win a grand prize from the Paris Academy of Sciences.
Sophie Germain grew up in a world where women were told their brains were too fragile for the rigors of geometry and physics. During the chaos of the French Revolution, while the streets of Paris were filled with violence, she retreated into her father's library to study the order of numbers.
Her parents tried to stop her, but Sophie was relentless. She would wait for them to go to sleep before sneaking into the study and working by the light of smuggled candles.
But the biggest gatekeepers were the academic elite. When she wanted to study at the famous Ecole Polytechnique, she found the doors were locked to women.
She didn't get angry. She got creative.
She took on the name of a former student, M. LeBlanc, and began submitting her work under this male pseudonym. Her brilliance was so undeniable that the great professor Lagrange demanded to meet this mystery student named LeBlanc.
When he found out his star pupil was actually a young woman, he didn't mock her. He was stunned by her talent.
She saw the logic. She saw the beauty. She saw the truth.
For years, she corresponded with the legendary Carl Friedrich Gauss. When Napoleon's army began invading German lands, she feared for the mathematician's safety and used her family connections to protect him.
When Gauss finally learned that his brilliant pen pal was a woman, he was moved. He wrote that women who overcome such incredible obstacles to reach these heights possess 'the most noble courage.'
Sophie’s work in elasticity and number theory paved the way for the math we use to build skyscrapers and bridges today. She didn't need a degree to prove her worth to the world.
She proved that true talent is a gift that no man-made rule can ever truly suppress.

In 1942, she was the highest-paid star in Hollywood, but she didn't care about the money. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Carole Lombard knew her country needed more than just movies.
She headed back to her home state of Indiana with a mission to raise funds for the war effort. Her goal was set at $500,000, but her spirit was far greater than any quota.
She stood before massive crowds, selling peace of mind in the form of war bonds. By the time she finished, she had raised over $2 million for the American soldiers.
But the journey home would turn into a moment that stopped the heart of the nation. She was tired and desperate to get back to her husband, the legendary Clark Gable, in California.
Her mother and her publicist were terrified of flying and begged her to take the train. The original plan was a safe, slow rail journey across the heartland.
But the actress was determined to get home. To settle the dispute, they pulled out a coin for a simple toss.
She won the toss. That bit of luck would be the last she ever had.
On January 16, 1942, TWA Flight 3 took off into the night from Las Vegas. Just minutes after departure, the plane veered off course and slammed into the side of Potosi Mountain.
There were no survivors. She was gone, along with her mother and 15 brave Army Air Corps personnel who were heading to the front.
She saw their courage. She saw their sacrifice. She saw their duty.
When the news reached Washington, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was devastated by the loss of his friend. He recognized that her death was not just a tragedy, but a sacrifice for the flag.
He declared her the first woman to be killed in the line of duty during World War II. She was posthumously awarded the Medal of Freedom for her service.
Her husband, Clark Gable, was never the same. He immediately joined the Army Air Corps to honor her memory, serving as an aerial gunner in the heat of combat.
Today, we remember her not for the films she made, but for the life she gave. She proved that true stardom is found in service to others.

In 1833, a Victorian aristocrat met a brilliant engineer at a London party, and the world of mathematics was never the same. Ada Lovelace was only 17 years old when she first laid eyes on Charles Babbage’s prototype of the Difference Engine. Most guests saw a collection of gears and brass, but she saw something others missed.
She saw the logic. She saw the mechanics. She saw the potential for a new kind of machine that could change human history.
Ada Lovelace quickly became one of the few people in the world who truly understood Babbage's revolutionary vision. While Babbage was a master builder, Ada became a master of the theoretical.
In 1842, she was asked to translate an article about Babbage’s newest machine, the Analytical Engine. But Ada didn’t just translate the words. She added her own thoughts, which ended up being three times longer than the original article itself.
Among these additions was Note G, which detailed a set of instructions for calculating Bernoulli numbers using the machine. This wasn't just math. This was the first published computer program in history.
But the path wasn't easy. The Victorian era was not a time that easily accepted women in the hard sciences or engineering.
She faced skepticism from her peers. She faced the limitations of her time. She faced the physical reality that the machine she was writing for had not even been built yet.
Still, she pushed forward. She recognized that this steam-powered computer could one day create music, process images, and assist science in ways Babbage himself hadn't considered.
Babbage was so impressed by her sharpness that he nicknamed her the "Enchantress of Numbers." He realized that while he had built the body of the computer, she had envisioned its soul.
Unfortunately, Babbage’s engine was never fully completed in their lifetime due to funding issues and technical hurdles. Ada died young, never seeing her algorithm run on a physical machine.
Today, we live in the world she imagined. Every smartphone, laptop, and satellite operates on the fundamental principles she documented in a drafty study over 180 years ago.
Her legacy is the proof that vision matters just as much as hardware.
She was more than a translator; she was the architect of our digital age.

In 1938, a small inn in Whitman, Massachusetts, was about to make history. Most people today are told it was a clumsy mistake. They say the chef ran out of nuts and grabbed a chocolate bar in a panic.
But that is simply not the truth. Ruth Graves Wakefield was not a woman who made mistakes. She was a meticulous chef with a degree in household arts and a reputation for perfection.
Ruth Graves Wakefield owned the Toll House Inn with her husband. She didn't want to just serve food; she wanted to serve an experience. Her guests expected the best, and she was determined to give them something they had never seen before.
She looked at her popular butterscotch nut cookie and saw a chance for innovation. She took a knife to a Nestlé semi-sweet chocolate bar and chopped it into tiny, irregular pieces.
But the magic happened when those trays went into the oven. Ruth didn't expect the chocolate to melt and ruin the dough. She knew exactly what she was doing.
She saw their joy. She saw their surprise. She saw their satisfaction. The chocolate held its shape, creating soft, warm pockets of sweetness inside a crisp dough.
The "Toll House Chocolate Crunch Cookie" was born. It wasn't a fluke. It was a calculated victory for a woman who understood the American palate better than anyone else at the time.
Soon, demand for the recipe exploded across New England. It grew so large that Nestlé noticed the massive spike in their chocolate bar sales in the region.
Ruth made a deal that most business experts would call legendary. She gave Nestlé the rights to her recipe for the price of just one dollar and a lifetime supply of chocolate.
She didn't want the millions. She wanted the legacy. To this day, your yellow bag of chocolate chips carries her name and her original recipe on the back.
She saw the potential. She saw the future. She saw the legend. Every time you smell cookies in the oven, you are smelling the genius of a woman who refused to settle for the ordinary.
Today, it is the most popular cookie in the world.

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