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Fast facts


Photo
Illustration by Mike Padilla
Arizona Daily Wildcat
Friday, January 28, 2005
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Things you always never wanted to know

  • The Saturn V moon rocket burned 15 tons of fuel per second.

  • "Racecar" is a palindrome, meaning it's spelled the same way when spelled out backward.

  • At McDonald's in New Zealand, they serve apricot pies instead of cherry ones.

  • Lucy Ricardo's maiden name was McGillicudy.

  • The human head contains 22 bones.

  • A typical athlete's heart churns out 25 to 30 liters (up to 8 gallons) of blood per minute.

  • The bones in your body are not white - they range in color from beige to light brown. The bones you see in museums are white because they have been boiled and cleaned.

  • If all of your DNA was stretched out, it would reach to the moon 6,000 times.

  • Nessie the Loch Ness monster is protected by the 1912 "Protection of Animals Act" of Scotland. With good reason - Nessie is worth $40 million annually to Scottish tourism.

  • Small-time gamblers who place a bet in order to prolong the excitement of a game are called "dead fish" by game operators because the longer the playing time, the greater the chances of losing.

  • Australians are the heaviest gamblers in the world; an estimated 82 percent of Australians gamble. That is twice as much per capita as Europeans or Americans. Yet, Australia, with less than 1 percent of the world's population, has 20 percent of the world's poker machines.

  • The electric chair was invented by a dentist.

  • The pleasant feeling when eating chocolate is caused by a chemical called anadamide, a neurotransmitter, which is also produced naturally in the brain.

  • There are more than 150 million sheep in Australia, a nation of 17 million people. New Zealand is home to 4 million people and 70 million sheep.


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