30 Bizarre Facts Stranger Than Fiction – Part 1

21Hyaluronic Acid

Hyaluronic Acid

Hyaluronic acid which is used to keep arthritic joints lubricated and used in plastic surgeries to plump wrinkly or sagging skin is sourced from a very strange place. Red combs of roosters and hens turn out to be some of the best sources for hyaluronan, a compound that doctors called the next best thing after Botox. It’s probably one of the only parts of a chicken or rooster that humans don’t eat and if one can get money from waste, then what’s the harm.


22Risk Takers & Cats

Risk Takers & Cats

Toxoplasmosis Gondii is a brain parasite that spreads through cat feces. In rats, it slows them down, causes attraction to cats, and generally makes them less fearful. This parasite is transmissible to humans and can cause humans to excessively care for cats. Also, infected female humans are more likely to find infected males attractive. Recent studies have also shown that infected humans were more likely to take risks and found a positive correlation between successful entrepreneurs and T. Gondii infection.


23Aztec Sacrifices

Aztec Sacrifices

Aztecs are rather famous among historians for the different kinds of sacrificial rituals they performed to appease their deities. Children were required to cry before being sacrificed so that their tears would wet the earth to appease the Aztec deity Tlaloc. If they didn't cry, priests would tear out their fingernails to trigger crying. To honor the sun god Huitzilopochtli, the most famous rituals involved the removal of a living person’s heart. Earth mother Teteoinnan’s offerings generally required skinned female victims. Archeologists have discovered a site of mass sacrifice at the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan. Depending on the sources, it is said that Aztecs sacrificed anywhere between 4000-80,000 people over four days, which would be 41-840 sacrifices per hour for the entire festival.


24Thomas Silverstein

Thomas Silverstein

Thomas Silverstein spent the last 36 years of his life locked alone in solitary confinement. He was first put in prison for a robbery that netted him only a few hundred dollars, but in prison, he joined Aryan Neighborhood and murdered inmates which netted him additional life sentences. After killing a correction officer, he was placed in a windowless underground cell in 1983. He was only once released out of his cell briefly during a prison riot. He died in 2019, well before his theoretical release date of 2095.


25Scold's Bridle

Scold's Bridle

A Scold's Bridle sometimes called the Witch's Bridle was an instrument of punishment; a form of torture and public humiliation in 16th century Britain & Scotland. The device was an iron muzzle in an iron framework that enclosed the head and introduced a spiked bit to be inserted into the mouth to prevent speech, torture, and humiliate women that nagged, gossiped, or quarreled. The chain allowed men, sometimes the husband of the scold, to lead them through town to be beaten and humiliated.


26Miasma Theory

Miasma Theory

Before germ theory, people believed in “miasma theory”, which was the idea that sickness came from “bad air”. “Miasma” is the Latin word for “bad air” and the word “malaria” actually derives from the Italian for “bad air” - the mal'aria because it was thought that Malaria was caused by bad-smelling air associated with swamps.


27Virgin Tea

Virgin Tea

A 'PG Lips' tea plantation in China hires virgins with C-cup breasts to pick tea by grabbing the leaves with their lips and then dropping them into a wicker basket nestled between their breasts. The women cannot touch the leaves or the basket with their hands, and in addition to specifically requesting C-cup breasts, the plantation also requires that the women have no visible scars or wounds. According to the spokesperson for the company, this odd requirement comes from a legend about how the tea used to be picked by the mouths of fairies. With this method, the tea is supposed to be infused with the virility and purity of the virgins, which is then passed on to the person who drinks the tea.


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28Pressed duck

Pressed duck

Pressed duck is a traditional French dish. The duck is strangled so as to retain its bodily fluids. It’s then semi-roasted, legs, breast, and liver removed. The rest of the carcass is then placed in a special duck press to extract the liquids and marrow from the duck to serve as a sauce over the cooked breast. The dish was created at the Tour d’Argent restaurant in Paris in the 19th century. Soon after, it didn’t take long for duck presses to make their way into home kitchens.


29Barbara Foster

Barbara Foster

After getting a frantic 911 call that a 75-year-old woman seemingly refused to get out of her chair, police arrived at Barbara Foster’s home in Springfield Township. They were soon horrified to find that Barbara, who weighed upwards of 550 pounds, was literally molded to her chair as her skin had begun attaching itself to the fabric. When they tried to remove her from her house her bones started breaking. After a month-long stay in the hospital, she died in 2017.


30Mummy Brown

Mummy Brown

‘Mummy Brown’ is a rich brown pigment used in paints that was originally made in the 16th and 17th centuries from the ground-up remains of Egyptian mummies, both human and feline. It fell from popularity during the 19th century when its composition became more generally known to artists. One art manufacturer told Time Magazine in 1964 that they had to stop making it as they could no longer find enough mummified limbs.

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