100 THINGS WE DIDN'T KNOW LAST YEAR !
The most interesting and unexpected facts can emerge from the daily news stories and the Magazine documents some of them in its weekly feature, 10 things we didn't know last week. To kick off 2008, here are some of the best of last year.
1. Coach travel is the safest form of road transport in the country.More details
2. Saddam Hussein's codename while in US custody in 2004/5 was "Victor".More details
3. Adding milk to tea negates the health-giving effects of a hot brew.More details
4. The word "jaywalking" came from the US slang "jay", a term popular in the early 20th Century meaning a rustic newcomer unfamiliar with city ways.More details
5. Cloudy apple juice is healthier than clear, containing almost double the antioxidants which protect against heart disease and cancer.More details
6. Dishcloths are purged of 99% of their bacteria during two minutes in a microwave.More details
7. A haddock's mating call starts as a slow knocking sound, before turning into a quicker hum similar to a small motorcycle revving its engine.More details
8. Newcastle is the noisiest place in England.More details
9. The people who built Stonehenge lived at an ancient village in Durrington Walls.More details
10. Brazil nuts are seeds encased in an outer shell that weighs more than 1kg.More details
11. Astronauts wear nappies during launch and re-entry because they can't stop what they're doing should they need to urinate. More details
12. Georgic is a punishment dished out to Eton pupils which involves the copying out of hundreds of lines of Latin. More details
13. Tony Blair does not keep a personal diary. More details
14. Antony and Cleopatra were ugly.More details
15. 10% of university work from across the UK is plagiarised.More details
16. Chimpanzees make their own spears for hunting.More details
17. Two cups of spearmint tea a day is thought to control excessive hair growth for women.More details
18. Burglar alarms, traffic wardens and crowded buses are good news for home owners, signalling an area is on the up.More details
19. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez hosts a daily radio phone-in show.More details
20. More than half (52%) of smokers haven't told their parents about their habit. More detail
21. Only about half of China's population can speak the national language, Mandarin.More details
22. The brief flowering of the cherry blossom tree is taken so seriously in Japan that forecasts are used to plan festivals, and travel agents use them to plan tours.More details
23. To be found attractive, women should sway their hips and men their shoulders (although researchers call this a "shoulder swagger").More details
24. The are 30,000 wild parakeets in London.More details
25. Martina Navratilova has spent four years secretly working as an artist.More details
26. Harvesting rhubarb in candlelight helps preserve its flavour.More details
27. Drinking, drug-taking teenagers are in the decline, according to a survey by the Information Centre.More details
28. Designer discount retailer TK Maxx is called TJ Maxx in the US.More details
29. The average duvet is home to 20,000 live dust mites.More details
30. Serving anything more than tea and biscuits at a political meeting is an offence called "treating" and punishable by a year in prison or an unlimited fine, under the the Representation of the People Act 1893.More details
31. There is mobile phone reception from the summit of Mount Everest. More details
32. Anti-Americanism began in Paris in the 18th Century.More details
33. Female civil servants in India are questioned about their menstrual cycle as part of their appraisal.More details
34. Kryptonite exists.More details
35. Denmark is the happiest country in Europe; Italy the unhappiest. (The UK was 9th out of 15.)More details
36. A water-tight denial by a politician – as opposed to one that leaves room for later manoeuvre - is known as a Sherman pledge. The other sort is called a non-denial denial.More details
37. Spiralling obesity rates are forcing councils to upgrade their crematoria, to take wider coffins.More details
38. Gerry Adams doesn't own a credit card, so gets a friend to download songs from the internet. More details
39. The secret to happiness is accepting misery. More details
40. A new three-bedroom house must have at least 38 plug sockets. More details
41. There are 1,200 exhumations every year in the UK, but not all of those are part of criminal cases.More details
42. Nearly seven out of 10 (69%) of adults are still in touch with at least one childhood friend.More details
43. Bernard Manning worked as an armed guard watching over senior Nazis locked up in Berlin’s Spandau prison.More details
44. Europe has a vodka belt comprising Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland, Denmark and Sweden, although the drink is also made in countries such as Britain, France, Italy and Spain.More details
45. Domestic cats can trace their descent to the Middle East.More details
46. Peanuts can be made into diamonds.More details
47. The prime ministerial Jaguar is called Pegasus.More details
48. You can be arrested for using someone's wi-fi network without permission.More details
49. CDs were nearly called mini-racks.More details
50. Left-handed people are called sinistral.More details
51. Nick Clegg, the Lib Dems' new leader, once took a road trip across the US with his friend Louis Theroux.More details
52. There are 17 surviving versions of the Magna Carta - or 17 Magnae Cartae. More details
53. Renowned atheist Professor Richard Dawkins likes singing Christmas carols.More details
54. The Australian town of Eucla has its own time zone. More details
55. Books used to be bound in human skin.More details
56. Eddie Irvine is Britain's wealthiest sports star – beating the Beckhams into second place by £30m.More details
57. Sleeping on the job is tolerated in Japanese work culture, as long as you remain upright and obey certain other rules. It's called inemuri.More details
58. The Romans had roadmaps. More details
59. The word Blighty comes from "bilayti", the Urdu for homeland.More details
60. The Queen took her corgi on honeymoon.More details
61. Janet and John were named Alice and Jerry in the United States.More details
62. Until the late 1990s, the RAF's nuclear bombs could be activated using a bicycle lock key.More details
63. Cats can be police constables.More details
64. King Tut had buck teeth. More details
65. The Italian Mafia have commandments.More details
66. Gun ownership per person in Finland is the third highest in the world.More details
67. The brain can turn down its ability to see in order to listen to complex sounds like music.More details
68. Of the waste in UK landfills, 0.1% is plastic carrier bags.More details
69. Dogs occasionally shoot their owners in the US.More details
70. IP addresses will run out in 2010. More details
71. An ai is a three-toed sloth from South America (and the word that clinched Paul Allan the title of national Scrabble champion).More details
72. Dumbledore is gay.More details
73. UN population projections go as far as 2300.More details
74. Sheffield FC is the world’s oldest football club.More details
75. CO2 emissions from shipping are twice the level of aviation.More details
76. George Clooney and Pierce Brosnan have had Bell's Palsy - a nerve condition that can result in paralysis on one side of the face.More details
77. Leeches are used as treatment for cauliflower ears.More details
78. A bdelloid rotifer is a pond-dwelling organism that has survived 80 million years without sex.More details
79. Woodwork lessons are known as "resistant materials" in schools. More details
80. Adults use maths skills 14 times daily on average and literacy skills 23 times a day.More details
81. The opening bars to the theme tune of Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em spelt the title of the series in Morse code.More details
82. The children who sang on Pink Floyd's number one hit Another Brick in the Wall (Pt 2) couldn't appear in the video because they didn't hold Equity cards.More details
83. Jack Straw has intervened in alleged crimes four times, apprehending a person on three occasions.More details
84. On average a UK commuter travels the equivalent of two-and-a-half times around the globe over a full working career. More details
85. A 23.8lb baby was born in the US in 1879, but it only survived 11 hours.More details
86. There is a monastery in every village in Burma. More details
87. Relocating crocodiles doesn't work - they come back.More details
88. Deep-voiced men have more children.More details
89. Being born without an ear is called microtia.More details
90. Chickens can be diagnosed with depression.More details
91. In Iceland, 96% of women go to university.More details
92. Zsa Zsa Gabor is related to Paris Hilton.More details
93. Dinosaurs had creches.More details
94. Osama Bin Laden is known to fellow jihadists as Abu Abdullah.More details
95. In Ethiopia the start of the year 2000 was celebrated in September.More details
96. Bees can detect explosives.More details
97. There have been at least two children given the name "Superman" in the UK since 1984.More details
98. Prison officers are on average assaulted eight times a day.More details
99. Each slug eats twice its body weight a day.More details
100. Dogs can have two noses.More details
BBC MAGAZINE
Labels: BBC-Magazine Facts News Stories
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