Fast Facts


Arizona Daily Wildcat
August 31, 2005

Things you've always never wanted to know

  • It takes a person 15 to 20 minutes to walk once around the Pentagon.

  • A newborn polar bear cub weighs only twice as much as a healthy newborn human - about 15 pounds. Yet when fully grown, polar bears reach weights of up to 1,600 pounds.

  • Between 1968 and 1978, the price of the average American automobile doubled.

  • Parrots, most famous of all talking birds, rarely acquire a vocabulary of more than 20 words.

  • Rennet, a common substance used to curdle milk and make cheese, is taken from the inner lining of the fourth stomach of a calf.

  • Rice is the chief food for more than half the people of the world.

  • Vaslav Nijinsky (1890-1950), the famous Russian ballet dancer, was able to cross and uncross his legs 10 times during a single leap, an elevation known in ballet as an entrechat dix. No other dancer has ever been able to duplicate this feat.

  • Louis XIV had 40 personal wigmakers and almost 1,000 wigs.

  • A comet's tail always points away from the sun.

  • The moon weighs 81 billion tons.

  • The star Antares is 60,000 times larger than our sun. If the sun were the size of a softball, Antares would be as large as a house.

  • A housefly lives only two weeks. Not patient enough? The best time to spray household insects is 4 p.m. Insects are most active and vulnerable at this time.

  • A peanut is neither pea nor nut - it is a legume.

  • If the Earth were compressed to a sphere with a 2-inch diameter, its surface would be as smooth as a billiard ball's.

  • Of all professionals in the U.S., journalists are credited with having the largest vocabulary - approximately 20,000 words. Clergymen, lawyers and doctors each have about 15,000 words at their disposal. Skills workers who have not had a college education know between 5,000 and 7,000 words. Farm laborers know about 1,600. The average American's vocabulary is 10,000 words.

  • In ancient China, people committed suicide by eating a pound of salt.

  • The human brain is 80 percent water, more watery than our blood.