Monday, March 12, 2012

GARBAGE PATCH, KIDS

According to a 1995 poll, 1 out of 10 Americns, mostly women but also men, admitted that they will buy an outfit intending to wear it once and return it

In Los Angeles, discarded garments are being recycled as industrial rags and carpet underlay. Such recycling keeps clothing out of landfills, where it makes up 4 percent of the trash dumped each year in that one city

The largest cell in the human body is the female egg  (The smallest is the male sperm)

The average sperm cell swims at 8 inches per hour

After age 30, the brain begins to lose about 50,000 neurons per day - shrinking the brain .25% each year.  Neurons are specialized cells which are electrically excitable, and can use that electric excitability to received and transmit information

On average, men are more likely to suffer heart attacks than are women, but women are more likely to die from a heart attack

Your ears secrete more earwax when you are afraid than when you are calm

The Cinderella theme may well have originated in classical antiquity. The Ancient Greek historian Strabo (Geographica Book 17, 1.33) recorded in the 1st century BC the tale of the Greco-Egyptian girl Rhodopis, "rosy-cheeked", who lived in the Greek colony of Naucratis in Ancient Egypt. It is often considered the oldest known version of the story:  "They tell the fabulous story that, when she was bathing, an eagle snatched one of her sandals from her maid and carried it to Memphis. While the king was administering justice in the open air, the eagle, when it arrived above his head, flung the sandal into his lap. The king, having been stirred both by the beautiful shape of the sandal and by the strangeness of the occurrence, sent men in all directions into the country in quest of the woman who wore the sandal. When she was found in the city of Naucratis, she was brought up to Memphis and became the wife of the king..."
   
Rome has more homeless cats per square mile than any other city in the world
A feral cat stretches amid famous ancient ruins of Rome
Mice, whales, elephants, giraffes, and humans all have seven neck vertebra

The one extra room new-home shoppers want the most is the laundry room, at 95 percent. Only 66 percent of new-home buyers request an extra room to use as an office while a mere 13 percent want a study or library

During the American Revolution, many brides did not wear white wedding gowns; instead, they wore red as a symbol of rebellion

Denmark is the smallest of the Scandinavian nations. It is home to the first Legoland, a 10-hectare theme park built from plastic Lego blocks, and is Denmark's most-visited attraction outside of Copenhagen. The most elaborate reconstruction at Legoland is the three-million-block Port of Copenhagen exhibit, which features electronically controlled ships, trains, and cranes
Copenhagen's Nyhavn canal build in LEGO bricks in Legoland
In Holland, you can be fined for not using a shopping basket at a grocery store

Napoleon constructed his battle plans in a sandbox

Leonardo Da Vinci predicted the mass use of solar energy as long ago as 1447

The oldest glowing lightbulb was first switched on in 1901 and lives in fire stations in Livermore, CA. It is known as the Centennial Light
   
Ancient gladiators were mostly vegetarians

The time interval from first sighting of the iceberg that sank the Titanic to impact was a little over 30 seconds

The flushing toilet was invented in 1596, not by Thomas Crapper as most people think, but by Sir John Harington... but long before that, in 206 BCE, The Arab inventor, Al-Jazari, invented a hand washing device incorporating the flush mechanism now used in modern flush toilets. His device features an automaton by a basin filled with water. When the user pulls the lever, the water drains and the automaton refills the basin

1880s: Thomas Crapper's plumbing company built flush toilets of Giblin's design. Although not the original inventor, Crapper popularized the siphon system for emptying the tank, replacing the earlier floating valve system which was prone to leaks. Some of Crapper's designs were made by Thomas Twyford. The similarity between Crapper's name and the much older word crap is a coincidence 

Until the nineteenth century, solid blocks of tea were used as money in Siberia

Traces of cocaine were found on 99% of UK bank notes in a survey in London in 2000- The same was found to be true of the US dollar the following year

The oldest patented company logo is the red triangle of Bass beers, which was founded in 1777 in England


No one from the Nestle family have run Nestles since 1875     

The last time American Green cards were actually green was 1964 - an American "green card" establishes a person as having permanent resident status in the United States, which allows them to work and seek housing and have access to entitlements such as unemployment insurance and public healthcare such as Medicaid


The great wall of China is 1,400 miles long

NEWS FEED:
In June 2011, the California Court of Appeals threw out the three counts of possession of child pornography for which Joseph Gerber had been convicted, even though what Gerber had done was paste face shots of his own 13-year-old daughter onto ordinary pornographic photos. The U.S. Supreme Court decided in 2002 that a conviction for making "child pornography" requires actual sexual abuse

It is not the most popular fetish, but a few men do don raincoats and climb down into public outhouse pits. Luke Chrisco, 30, was apprehended by police in June in a portable toilet at the Hanuman Yoga Festival in Boulder, Colorado Chrisco actually "slipped" away from police but was arrested days later in nearby Vail. According to his Facebook and YouTube pages (reported by The Smoking Gun), Chrisco offered himself as a male escort (sample rate: $620 for seven days) and recalled in one video that, on the road in April 2011, he once avoided sleeping overnight at a Greyhound Bus station because it "smelled weird"

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch has become an increasingly larger and more permanent part of the ocean--plastic and other floatables, along with concentrations of chemical sludge, estimated to measure from 0.4 percent to 8 percent of the entire Pacific and responsible for disruptions of the food chain affecting various
species of aquatic life. Now, thanks to the March 2011 tsunami near Japan, the estimated 25 million tons of debris from cars, homes, appliances, shipping containers, chemicals, etc., from coastal Fukushima that washed back out to sea will soon be caught in the same Pacific swirls, in what a French environmental group forecast would be a pair of ocean-navigating journeys that will last at least 10 years, gradually breaking off and joining (thus substantially enlarging) the two distinct legs of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

WHEN IN ROME

There are more telephones than people in Washington, D.C

In the United States, there are more fatal car accidents in July than any other month - globally, the most fatal month is March

There are 53 Lego bricks manufactured for each person in the world
A life-size Lego auto station created for the Windsor, Ontario LegoLand
The song 'Strawberry Fields Forever', sung by the Beatles, refers to an orphanage located in Liverpool

Odds of being killed falling out of bed:  1 in 2,000,000,000

Adjusting for inflation, in today's currency the first household refrigerators cost about $16,000 - In the United States, practical home refrigerators came into supply around 1915 and began gaining popularity by 1930.  As with nearly all products, with popularity the price began to level out and become attainable for most consumers

The face of a penny can hold about thirty drops of water

The average American uses eight times as much fuel energy as an average person anywhere else in the world
 
Pollen can travel up to 500 miles in a day

Number of Americans who will go to an emergency department in a hospital or clinic for a pillow-related injury each year:  6,000


Linen can absorb up to 20 times its weight in moisture before it feels damp

It takes the same amount of time to age a cigar as wine

In an average hour, there are over 61,000 people airborne over the United States 

In 21 U.S. states, WAL-MART is the single largest employer

Each day, more than $40 Trillion Dollars changes hands worldwide

Coal fires occur in coal seams and coal waste or storage piles when the temperature gets hot enough for the coal to burn or smolder. There are several ways that this can occur naturally or it can be caused by the negligence of a person or persons. One example of a coal fire is that of Burning Mountain (also known as Mount Wingen) in New South Wales, Australia. This particular coal seam fire has been burning for an estimated 5,000 years or more. The Burning Mountain coal fire is thought to be the oldest coal fire on Earth  
Those are not clouds in the sky, but are clouds of smoke bellowing from the ground
The search engine Google got its name from the word 'googol', which refers to the number one with a hundred zeros after it

In the US, the revenue that is generated from gambling is more than the revenue that comes from movies, cruise ships, recorded music, theme parks, and spectator sports combined  

Fine-grained volcanic ash can be found as an ingredient in some toothpastes

Polyergus, also called Amazon ants, is a small genus of 6 described species (and several possible undescribed species) of "slave-raiding" ants. Its workers are incapable of caring for brood, in part due to their dagger-like, piercing mandibles, but more importantly, because in the evolution of their parasitism, they have lost the "behavioral wiring" to carry out even rudimentary brood care, or even to feed themselves. Polyergus species subsist solely as a specialized brood-acquiring caste, maintaining a worker force by robbing brood of particular species in the closely related genus  
 Formica in massive colony-to-colony raids. The captured ants are generally referred to as "slaves" in scientific and popular literature, though recent attempts have been made to apply other human cultural models, such as describing the Polyergus individuals of a colony as "raiders" or "pirates" and the Formica workers as "helper-ants", or "domesticated animals". Biologists describe the system simply as social parsitism by Polyergus on the host Formica species  

Smelling bananas and/or green apples (smelling, not eating) can help you lose weight - the scent releases a chemical in the human brain that not only suppresses appetite but burns calories

The average person spends three years of his or her life on a toilet

More Monopoly money is printed in a year, than real money printed throughout the world  

NEWS FEED:
The notorious Santa Croce monastery in Rome was closed in May (and converted to an ordinary church) on orders from the Vatican following reports about Sister Anna Nobili, a former lap-dancer who taught other nuns her skills and who was once seen lying spread-eagled before an alter clutching a crucifix. Santa Croce was also an embarrassment for its luxury hotel, which had become a mecca for celebrities visiting Rome

Zhou Xin, 68, failed to get a callback from the judges for the "China's Got Talent" TV reality show in June 2011, according to a CNN report (after judge Annie Yi screamed in horror at his act). Zhou is a practitioner of one of the "72 Shaolin skills," namely "iron crotch gong," and for his "talent," he stoically whacked himself in the testicles with a weight and then with a hammer 

The elegant, expansive, gleaming new glass-and-concrete indoor stairway at the Common Pleas Courthouse in Columbus, Ohio, opened recently, to mostly rave reviews for its sense of space and light, creating the feeling of walking suspended on air. However, as Judge Julie Lynch and other women soon discovered, the glass
partitions at each step make it easy for perverts to gawk from underneath at dress-wearing women ascending the stairs. "[Y]ou're on notice," Judge Lynch warned her sister dress-wearers, "that you might want to take the elevator"

Roy Miracle, 80, of Newark, Ohio, passed away in July 2011, and his family honored him and his years of service as a prankster and "superfan" of the Ohio State Buckeyes with a commemorative photo of three of Miracle's fellow obsessives making contorted-body representations of "O," "H," and "O" for their traditional visual cheer. In the photo, Miracle assumed his usual position as the "I"-- or, rather, his corpse did. (Despite some criticism, most family and friends thought Miracle was properly honored)
    

Thursday, March 1, 2012

BEST FOOT FORWARD

In the Middle Ages in Europe, one Valentine's Day custom was for young men and women to draw names from a bowl to see who their valentines would be. They would then wear these names on their sleeves for one week. “To wear your heart on your sleeve” now means that it is easy for other people to know how you are feeling

Popcorn was banned at most movie theaters in the United States in the 1920s because it was considered too noisy

Horned lizards eat ants. They wait in areas where ants are working and when one passes by, they flick out their tongue, catch their prey, and swallow without chewing
A horned lizard sunning on a dead tree branch
North Dakota is the nation's top sunflower grower, producing 50 percent of the U.S. crop. Germany uses kernels heavily in making bread and is the largest export market for U.S.-produced sunflower kernels, accounting for more than half of all kernel exports. Spain is the largest export market for U.S. in-shell sunflowers

Your brain is more active sleeping than it is watching TV

The average rainfall around the world is 40 inches per year

It is estimated that a healthy individual releases 3.5 oz. of gas in a single flatulent emission, or about 17 oz. in a day

The first 12-ounce aluminum soda can was introduced in 1964 by Royal Crown Cola. Coke didn't start using aluminum until 3 years later, and that same year Pepsi came out with a seamless can

In Scotland, New Year's Eve is called hogmanay - There are many customs, both national and local, with the most widespread national custom being the practice of 'first-footing' which starts immediately after midnight. This involves being the first person to cross the threshold of a friend or neighbor and often involves the giving of symbolic gifts such as salt (less common today), coal, shortbread, whiskey, and black bun (a rich fruit cake) intended to bring different kinds of luck to the householder. Food and drink (as the gifts) are then given to the guests. This may go on throughout the early hours of the morning and well into the next day (although modern days see people visiting houses well into January). The first-foot is supposed to set the luck for the rest of the year

In ancient Egypt, when merchants left the country on business trips they carried small stone models of themselves. If they died while abroad, these figures were sent back to Egypt for proxy burial

A house in Rockport, Massachusetts is built entirely of newspaper. The Paper House at Pigeon Cove, as it is called, is made of 215 thicknesses of newspaper.  The only other materials are the brick and mortar chimney and wooden railings
     
Mountain goats grow luxurious winter coats — more than three inches of cashmere-quality wool, overlaid with long hollow hairs. The hardy animals can endure winter temperatures as low as minus 50 degrees F, and powerful winds up to 100 miles per hour

The great cathedral of St. Sophia at Constantinople (Istanbul) has sustained for 1,600 years what was, until very recent times, the largest self-supporting dome ever constructed. Moreover, it has done so in an active seismic region 

The Chinese, during the reign of Kublai Khan, used lions on hunting expeditions. They trained the big cats to pursue and drag down massive animals — from wild bulls to bears — and to stay with the kill until the hunter arrived

Beards are the fastest growing hairs on the human body. If the average man never trimmed his beard, it would grow to nearly 30 feet long in his lifetime

Adélie penguins employ yawning as part of their courtship ritual

The speed at which Earth moves around the Sun makes it is impossible for a solar eclipse to last more than 7 minutes and 58 seconds

In fourteenth-century England, the number of males named Robert, William, Henry, John, or Richard averaged 2 out of every 3

Miami, Florida, is the most southerly major city in the continental United States, sitting about two degrees north of the Tropic of Cancer

Dr. Samuel Langley was able to get many model airplanes to fly, but on December 8, 1903, Langley's "human carrying flying machine," the aerodrome plunged into the Potomac River near Washington D.C., in front of photographers who were assembled to witness the event. Reporters around the country made fun of the idea that people could fly
The crash of the model plane was captured by several photographers in 1903, including this shot
A lion in the wild averages 20 kills a year   
     
One out of every three British males between the ages of 17 and 35 was killed in World War I

A 4-inch-long abalone can grip a rock with a force of 400 pounds - Abalone (from Spanish abulón) are small to very large-sized edible sea snails  
A northern abalone clings to a rocky surface to eat algae
Born on November 14, 1963, the island of Surtsey off the coast of Iceland, achieved permanence in 1965 when volcano lava spread over its surface, protecting it from erosion  
The island continued growing through eruption until 1967, and has been shrinking ever since
NEWS FEED: 
Thanks to a loophole recently sanctioned by the Iowa Court of Appeals, Matt Danielson and his wife Jamie
now own their home in Ankeny, Iowa, outright (value: $278,000) after making just one monthly mortgage payment. Iowa law regards a home mortgage by a married couple as automatically void if only one spouse has signed it, and a thusly-voided mortgage is treated as fully satisfied. (The purpose was to prevent one estranged spouse from exploiting the other, but the voiding is automatic regardless of the circumstances.) Legislators are currently trying to change the law to leave the discretion of voiding up to judges 

Harold Luken, 45, was arrested on April 8th in New York City near a Bank of America after his attempt to rob it failed badly. According to police, Luken walked in at 1:50 p.m. and announced that he had a gun and intended to rob the place - but then merely got in a line and said he would wait for a teller. When he finally got to the window (with police apparently on their way), Luken restated his intention and, as if narrating, announced the handing over of the robbery note. When the teller refused to respond, Luken asked to check the balance in his own account, but the teller again declined, provoking Luken to walk away and shout, "OK, I will go to Citibank [and] rob them instead!"  He was arrested minutes later 

Tonya McDowell, 33, an off-and-on homeless person in Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA was arrested in April by police in nearby Norwalk and charged with felony theft--of $15,686 worth of "services" from the city. McDowell's crime was enrolling her 6- year-old son in Norwalk's Brookside Elementary School when she actually "resided" (as much as a mostly "homeless" person can "reside") in Bridgeport. McDowell has also "resided" at times in a Norwalk shelter but was crashing at a friend's apartment in Bridgeport when she registered her son. The head of the Norwalk Board of Education acknowledged that the usual consequence for an unqualified student is merely dismissal from school 

In March, jurors in New Orleans convicted Isaiah Doyle of a 2005 murder and were listening to evidence in the penalty phase of the trial when Doyle decided to take the witness stand (as defendants sometimes do in a desperate attempt to avoid the death penalty). However, Doyle said to the jurors, "If I had an AK-47, I'd kill every last one of ya'all with no remorse." (The jury recommended lethal injection)
 

FEED*YOUR*HEAD on Facebook