Giant squids have a donut-shaped brain, so that their esophagus can flow through the center.
For a decade, until 1928, there was a radioactive energy drink called "Radithor" on the American market.
Giraffes are carnivores.
Why would a gorilla be bared-teeth?
More people died building the V2 rockets during WW2 than were killed by the rockets themselves.
People with ginger hair are called "redheads" because in the past, the color orange was called "red".
The director of the film "Titanic", James Cameron, has never been to the deep sea.
Cheetahs cannot roar, they are only capable of meowing like a house cat.
The longest gap between the birth of two twins is 87 days.
If you launch from Earth, the most difficult place in the solar system to reach will be the sun.
The disease that supposedly turns people's muscles and tissues into bone, dubbed the Stone Man Syndrome, is just a myth.
Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler and Sigmund Freud never lived in Vienna at the same time.
Mount Everest has an elevation of 29,002 feet.
Horses cannot vomit.
The use of "plastic" in the term "plastic surgery" comes from the fact that the very first implant ever used, an ear implant, was made of plastic.
How many children did the most prolific mother ever have?
There were still woolly mammoths when the Great Pyramids of Giza were built.
All animals are able to edit their DNA or RNA.
Your feet age faster than your head.
Is corn considered:
Quizzes
Everyone loves quizzes, but why?
Well, it seems that our passion for quizzes comes from the fact that they are an insight into our own life story and that, deep down, human beings find comfort in being a type, in being part of some group. We are always searching for a better understanding of ourselves, of who we are as human beings, but also as unique individuals.
One of the reasons why personality quizzes are so popular is that they are a way for us to dig deeper into our inner selves and get to know ourselves.
Steven Myers, a professor of psychology, explains about quizzes, “you could introspect and think about yourself, however that has its limits… when we take these self-assessments, they give us another mirror inward.”
Although we are all unique and original beings in our individuality, no one can deny being reassured when they feel they are part of a group, a type, in some way. We naturally feel good when we fit into a box, and personality quizzes offer exactly what we are looking for: confirmation that we fit a certain type, just like millions of other people.