47 Random Facts That’ll Quench Your Daily Thirst For Knowledge – Part 95

- Sponsored Links -

26Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson

The United States invaded Canada in 1812. Former President Thomas Jefferson predicted that the "acquisition of Canada (..) will be a mere matter of marching". However, it went terribly. After a few months, the entire Michigan territory had fallen.


27. After a plane crash that wiped out almost the entire Russian National Hockey team in 1950, Stalin's son (Vasily Stalin) feared his father's reaction and recruited a new team in one day and his father did not even notice.


28. Underwater basket weaving has been used as a pejorative term for excessively easy/useless/niche courses for at least the past 65 years.


29. It took 49 years to publish the first authoritative English dictionary. It took 5 years to publish the first part, A to Ant.


30. Bulgarians refer to bucket hats as "idiotka", which means idiot hats.


Latest FactRepublic Video:
15 Most Controversial & Costly Blunders in History


31Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson couldn't read or write music. Instead, he fully realized music in his head and recorded himself singing the different parts on a cassette recorder.


32. Bog butter is an ancient waxy substance often found buried in peat bogs that was used as a way of preserving butter in ancient Ireland. The butter would gain flavor notes from its surroundings that were namely described as “gamey,” “moss,” “funky,” “pungent,” and “salami.”


33. Johnny Stompanato was a bodyguard and mafia enforcer for Mickey Cohen. He dated actress Lana Turner who he physically abused. On April 4th, 1958 after threatening the life of Turner, her mother, and daughter he was stabbed to death by Turner's 14-year-old daughter (Cheryl Crane).


34. Some chimpanzees have been observed sharpening sticks with their teeth and using them as spears to hunt small mammals.


35. Male rhesus macaque monkeys will pay to look at pictures of female rhesus macaques' bottoms.


- Sponsored Links -

36Polyergus samurai

Polyergus samurai

There is a species of samurai ant (Polyergus samurai) that is known to raid rival species nests, kill all the rival ants, collect the rivals eggs, and raise those hatched ants as slaves.


37. Seattle's Space Needle is an example of Googie architecture, a type that flourished in the post-World War 2 era and was parodied on The Jetsons. It was named after the West Hollywood Googie's Coffee Shop designed in 1949 by a student of Frank Lloyd Wright.


38. The city of Detroit has its own local currency, fully backed by U.S. currency. It's printed in $3 bills and features the Spirit of Detroit over the Detroit Skyline.


39. After India, the state of Texas now has the world's second-largest tiger population.


40. The oldest recorded murder victim was probably murdered 430,000 years ago. Archaeologists have discovered a skull dating from 430,000 years ago which shows distinct evidence of foul play. This is the earliest clear case of deliberate, lethal interpersonal aggression in the hominin fossil record, demonstrating that this is an ancient human behavior.


- Sponsored Links -

41Zebrafish

Zebrafish

If you get a zebrafish drunk, it convinces the other sober fish to follow it around.


42. People used to sleep indoors in ornate boxes called “box beds” or “lit close” to protect themselves from wolves, stay warm, and have some privacy.


43. In 1982, a man named Larry Walters attached his lawn chair to helium balloons and flew to 16,000 feet. He ended up floating in the path of pilots at Los Angeles International Airport. Armed with a pellet gun, he controlled his descent by firing the gun at the balloons, popping them one by one.


44. All of Michael Jackson's 'Dangerous tour' profits which were over $125 million were donated to various charities.


45. In 1910, the United States almost introduced wild hippopotami into Louisiana to get rid of water hyacinth.


46Peine forte et dure

Peine forte et dure

"Peine forte et dure" was a type of torture used in the common law legal system when a person remained silent upon questioning. It consisted of progressively heavier stones placed upon the chest until either a plea was entered, or the person died. It was legal for about 500 years, until 1772.


47. A Jewish woman named Natalia Karp saved her own life and her sister's life in a German concentration camp by playing Chopin so beautifully that the commanding officer declared "She shall live."

1
2
- Sponsored Links -

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here