
A hippo’s jaw opens wide enough to fit a sports car inside.
A hippo’s jaw opens wide enough to fit a sports car inside.

Geta sandals elevate feet from mud and once let geishas announce their presence through distinct, echoing clicks

In 1873, Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis patented riveted jeans to reinforce stress points for hard-working miners.

In 2018, a typo at Samsung Securities triggered a $100B stock error—causing chaos and a sharp price drop.

Messi sent a signed jersey to a boy who wore one made from a plastic bag.

Snow gum trees reveal colorful bark streaks as outer layers peel and oxidize at different stages.

Doha, Qatar is the first city to use blue roads to lower asphalt temperatures by up to 20°C.

Avocados contain persin, which is toxic to many animals.

Tom Hanks is Abraham Lincoln’s third cousin, four generations removed.

Ostriches have the largest eyes of any land animal—great for spotting danger on the savanna.

These common veggies don’t grow in the wild—they were bred from wild cabbage.

A Nigerian fisherman unknowingly caught a rare blue marlin—worth millions—but shared it with his village instead.

The arteries of a blue whale are so massive, a human could swim through the largest ones.

Triton’s backward orbit hints it was captured, not born with Neptune.

A theory suggests a second moon once orbited Earth—until it crashed into the Moon we know today.

In Churchill, unlocked cars offer emergency shelter from unexpected polar bear encounters.

Erika Eiffel symbolically married the Eiffel Tower, highlighting objectophilia and challenging norms about love and identity.

A massive flamingo sculpture at Tampa Airport creates a surreal underwater illusion.

Inspired by trampolines, Moon Shoes let kids bounce—but led to twisted ankles and safety recalls.

Jupiter’s moon Ganymede may have more water than Earth—beneath its frozen surface.


A new rubber horseshoe from Australia offers comfort, grip, and flexibility—no nails required

Superstition leads many skyscrapers to skip labeling the 13th floor—though it still exists physically.

Bolivia’s San Pedro Prison runs without guards inside—prisoners govern, work, and live with their families.

Daisugi is a 14th-century Japanese pruning method that produces straight lumber while keeping the parent tree alive and intact.