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FACTS 27/05/2015

FACTS 1)You can't sneeze without closing your eyes .......... 2)The loudest land animal is the Howler monkey whose deep growls and howls in the forest can travel clearly up to 3 miles. 3)Shocked to hear ...

31/12/2014



You can't sneeze without closing your eyes 👀..........

Mobile uploads 29/12/2014



The loudest land animal is the Howler monkey whose deep
growls and howls in the forest can travel clearly up to 3
miles.

FaÇť WöŘĺĐ on Twitter 17/12/2014

Shocked to hear about the massacre of innocent
children in Peshawwar.Taliban killed those innocents
just to prove its influence and power but as the matter
of fact it's their unpardonable and condemned act.We
all are standing with the parents of those children who
lost their priceless lives.

FaÇť WöŘĺĐ on Twitter “Shocked to hear about the massacre of innocent children in Peshawwar.Taliban killed those innocents just to prove its influence.”

17/12/2014



Dogs have faithfully lived with humans from over 14,000 years......

06/12/2014



A moment technically means 90 seconds... :-o

04/12/2014



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Ironically, the word "VERB" itself is a noun...

Mobile uploads 11/11/2014



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The only state in the U.S that grows coffee beans is Hawaii
in what’s known locally as the Kona district. Hawaiians
usually call coffee Kope and hawaiian coffee is some of the
most expensive in the world.

Mobile uploads 06/11/2014



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Foods that taste great in a restaurant tastes totally different
in an airplane at 35,000 feet in the air. At 35,000 feet your
taste buds are dramatically decreased making food taste
bland and dull.

Mobile uploads 05/11/2014



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A Clark’s Nutcracker (bird) can store up to 30,000 pine nuts
for the winter in over 6,000 different locations across 300
square miles and remember where at least 70% of them are,
finding them even if they’re snow covered. Special thanks to
the visitor who pointed out a spelling error on this
interesting fact.

Mobile uploads 25/10/2014



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The Oilbird (oil bird) is the loudest bird with it’s high pitched
clicking sounds.

Photos from FàÇť. WöŘĺĐ's post 30/09/2014

From the farthest reaches of the cosmos to the curious behavior of subatomic particles, science helps us understand our universe. But science can console as well as explain.

How does it do that? By helping us realize that some of our everyday problems are actually pretty puny. Consider these 10 common vexations and some super-awesome scientific facts that help put things in perspective:

1. This weather is absolutely unbearable. Yes, Earth can get really hot sometimes -- and really cold. And pretty stormy. But the weather is worse elsewhere in the solar system. If you lived on the side of Mercury that faces the sun, for example, you'd be coping with temperatures of 426 Celsius -- or almost 799 degrees Fahrenheit. It's even hotter on Venus, which unlike Mercury has a heat-trapping atmosphere.

And get this: on Neptune, the winds blow at 1,600 miles an hour, the temperature can drop to -201 Celsius (-330 Fahrenheit), and the seasons last more than 40 years.

mercury surface

Planet Mercury.

2. You cut yourself shaving. OK, so you nicked a blood vessel. Did you know an adult body contains about 100,000 miles of blood vessels?

3. You dropped your glasses in the deep end of the pool. Good thing you didn't drop them in the deepest part of the ocean! That would be the Mariana Trench, in the Pacific Ocean. It's an almost unfathomable 11,034 meters deep -- almost seven miles down.

4. It took forever for that elevator to come. Forever? A few minutes isn't much when you consider the universe is 13.8 billion years old. And even that's not forever.

5. You got caught doing 70 in a 55-mph zone. Next time that happens, maybe you should tell the officer at least you weren't going the speed of light -- 186,000 miles per second. Just how fast is that? If you could travel that fast, you could circle the earth at the equator 7.5 times in a single second. Of course, if you really could go that fast, you wouldn't have to worry about getting caught by a traffic cop.

6. You got a pebble in your shoe. A pebble, you say? About the size of a pea? Be glad it wasn't something bigger -- like maybe the biggest thing in the observable universe, which is a so-called "large quasar group," or LQG, discovered earlier this year. It spans a distance of four billion light-years, or 24 sextillion miles.

"While it is difficult to fathom the scale of this LQG, we can say quite definitely it is the largest structure ever seen in the entire universe," one of the scientists behind the discovery, the University of Central Lancashire's Roger Clowes, said in a written statement.

24/09/2014



Do you know????

More than 50% of the people in the world have never made
or received a telephone call.

Timeline photos 24/09/2014



Do you know??

In a study of 200,000 ostriches over a period of 80 years, no
one reported a single case where an ostrich buried its head
in the sand.

16/07/2014



Do u know???

The final resting-place for Dr. Eugene Shoemaker - the
Moon. The famed U.S. Geological Survey astronomer,
trained the Apollo astronauts about craters, but never made
it into space. Mr. Shoemaker had wanted to be an astronaut
but was rejected because of a medical problem. His ashes
were placed on board the Lunar Prospector spacecraft
before it was launched on January 6, 1998. NASA crashed
the probe into a crater on the moon in an attempt to learn if
there is water on the moon.

Timeline photos 15/07/2014



Do you know???

Some 80 percent of all the planet's earthquakes occur along
the rim of the Pacific Ocean, called the "Ring of Fire"
because of the preponderance of volcanic activity there as
well. Most earthquakes occur at fault zones, where tectonic
plates—giant rock slabs that make up the Earth's upper
layer—collide or slide against each other. These impacts are
usually gradual and unnoticeable on the surface; however,
immense stress can build up between plates. When this
stress is released quickly, it sends massive vibrations,
called seismic waves, often hundreds of miles through the
rock and up to the surface. Other quakes can occur far from
faults zones when plates are stretched or squeezed.
Scientists assign a magnitude rating to earthquakes based
on the strength and duration of their seismic waves. A
quake measuring 3 to 5 is considered minor or light; 5 to 7
is moderate to strong; 7 to 8 is major; and 8 or more is
great.
On average, a magnitude 8 quake strikes somewhere every
year and some 10,000 people die in earthquakes annually.
Collapsing buildings claim by far the majority of lives, but
the destruction is often compounded by mud slides, fires,
floods, or tsunamis. Smaller temblors that usually occur in
the days following a large earthquake can complicate rescue
efforts and cause further death and destruction.

15/07/2014



Do u know???

The radioactive substance, Americanium - 241 is used in
many smoke detectors.

15/07/2014

Good morning frnzzz.....

Howz u all today????

14/07/2014



Do you know???

Cats sleep up to eighteen hours a day, but never quite as
deep as humans. Instead, they fall asleep quickly and wake
up intermittently to check to see if their environment is still
safe.

14/07/2014



Do u know????

Tea is said to have been discovered in 2737 BC by a
Chinese emperor when some tea leaves accidentally blew
into a pot of boiling water. The tea bag was introduced in
1908 by Thomas Sullivan of New York.

14/07/2014



Do u know???

A crocodile can't stick it's tongue out... :$

14/07/2014

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Do u know???

It is impossible to lick your elbow (busted)....

14/07/2014

U know.????

People say "Bless you" when you sneeze because when you
sneeze,your heart stops for a mili-second...... :-o

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