Fastfacts


Arizona Daily Wildcat
March 2, 2004

Things you always never wanted to know

  • Gold is the 16th-rarest chemical element found on Earth. If all the gold produced in the world in the past five centuries were melted down, the result could be compressed into a cube measuring 50 feet on each side.

  • Blackbird, a chief of the Omaha Indian tribe, was buried sitting on his favorite horse.

  • The Minoans of ancient Crete had surprisingly advanced plumbing around 2000 B.C. Well-engineered drain systems, supply pipes and a flush toilet were found in the palace of Knossos when it was excavated in 1899.

  • When racing at top speed, the jackrabbit bounds, or broadjumps, up to 15 feet.

  • John D. Rockefeller made his first contribution to a philanthropic cause in 1855 at the age of 16. By the time he died, 82 years later, the oil magnate had given away $531,326,842.

  • At the height of inflation in Germany in the early 1920s, one American dollar was equal to 4.2 trillion German marks.

  • The Indians of Tierra del Fuego, at the southern tip of South America near Antarctica, wore no clothes to protect themselves from the sleet-filled air and icy waters.

  • The venom from a sea snake is 10 times as poisonous as that of a cobra, and has killed people within two and a half hours.

  • In 1932, a "continuous mass" of sea snakes 10 feet wide and 70 miles long was observed in the Straits of Malacca.

  • George Washington Carver, who researched crops such as the peanut to lead the South away from a one-crop economy (cotton), was illiterate until the age of 20.

  • Benjamin Franklin was cautious in performing his famous kite experiment in which he charged a Leyden jar with electricity drawn from the clouds. The first two men who tried to repeat the experiment were electrocuted.

  • The Central American country of Costa Rica, which has a population of more than 2 million people, does not have an army.