Thursday, January 01, 2009

100 THINGS !

100 things we didn't know last year

things.416.jpg

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 2009, here are some of the best of last year.

1. Victorians believed smoking cleared the lungs - and struck off Dr Thomas Allinson, who founded the bakery of the same name, for describing nicotine as a "foul poison" and advocating healthy eating.
More details

2. Police are not required to clean up a crime scene once evidence has been gathered.
More details

3. Octopuses need mental stimulation.
More details

4. Etiquette dictates that at dinner parties, a man should always talk to the woman on his left during the first course, and right during the main course.
More details

5. Both men and women find long legs in the opposite sex attractive, but not too long.
More details

6. Carrots used to be purple.
More details

7. Only offal-free versions of haggis are available in the United States.
More details

8. A bear helped carry ammunition for Polish troops during World War II.
More details

9. Swedes have a word for a man who visits prostitutes - torsk.
More details

10. The age at which we are most vulnerable to depression is 44, while a 70-year-old who is physically fit is, on average, as happy and mentally healthy as a 20-year-old.
More details

11. Cumbria is the safest county in England and Wales.
More details

12. Every year, the world's deserts produce 1,700 million tonnes of dust.
More details

11. St Kilda has no rats.
More details

12. The oldest Mormon congregation in the world is in Preston, Lancashire.
More details

13. A fire at a landfill site in Guernsey has been smouldering for three years.
More details

14. Brain tumours can be diagnosed by a handshake.
More details

15. Whales catnap.
More details

16. If housewives got salaries at the going rate for doing household chores, they would on average earn £30,000.
More details

17. For the first time in US history, more than one in every 100 American adults is behind bars.
More details

18. 23% of plastic bags used in the UK are from Tesco.
More details

19. Prison pay is on average £9.60 a week.
More details

20. The average midweek bedtime is between 10pm and 11pm.
More details

21. Short men are more likely to be jealous.
More details

22. Toasters are banned in Cuba.
More details

23. The most frequently used term of abuse in schools is "gay".
More details

24. Men eat more Brussel sprouts and broccoli than women.
More details

25. Lions were kept in the Tower of London in the 14th century.
More details

26. Up to one quarter of the sand on shorelines can be composed of plastic particles.
More details

27. It costs $100,000 to hunt a rhino in South Africa.
More details

28. The Olympic torch is designed to withstand winds of up to 65km an hour and stay alight in rain up to 50mm an hour.
More details

29. Each year 40,000 people pay homage at the California garage where the founders of Hewlett Packard started out.
More details

28. Rice was once considered so important in Japan that it was worshipped as a god.
More details

29. About 86% of fathers attend the birth of their children.
More details

30. Smells can drift across the Channel.
More details

31. The language of space is English.
More details

32. There are 109 journeys between London's Tube stations that are quicker to walk.
More details

33. A severed finger tip can grow back naturally.
More details

34. The most common "combination craving" for a pregnant woman is pickles and peanut butter.
More details

35. Punch and Judy puppeteers are called professors.
More details

36. Some 1.3 million unopened yoghurt pots are thrown away each day in the UK.
More details

37. The Ministry of Defence has amassed 160 files on UFOs, containing details of 8,000 sightings.
More details

38. Sloths aren't lazy.
More details

39. Brain chemical oxytocin makes us trust strangers with money.
More details

40. You can lessen jet lag by not eating.
More details

41. Women are banned by law from Mount Athos in Greece, home to 20 monasteries.
More details

42. One of the earliest Mars Bars was pineapple-flavoured. It flopped.
More details

43. Biscuits are key to clinching deals.
More details

44. Syria has the world's largest restaurant, seating 6,014 diners.
More details

45. Pigs can suffer from mysophobia, a fear of dirt.
More details

46. A petaflop is a measurement of computing speed equivalent to one thousand trillion calculations a second.
More details

47. Schools influence the smoking habits of young people.
More details

48. A bespoke garment does not necessarily need to be handmade.
More details

49. A Volvo can accommodate 13 people.
More details

50. The Royal Family costs the equivalent of 66p per person in the UK.
More details

51. An income of £13,400 is required to enjoy a minimum standard of living in the UK.
More details

52. Everton, Aston Villa and Fulham are among the football clubs that were created from Sunday schools.
More details

53. Pears sink while apples float.
More details

54. A monsoon is a wind, rather than rain.
More details

55. Young teenagers are drinking less and consuming fewer drugs.
More details

56. White Americans are 14% more likely than other ethnic groups to survive cancer.
More details

57. Faking one's death is known as pseudocide.
More details

58. Having fat friends increases your risk of obesity.
More details

59. Bees act in a similar way to serial killers.
More details

60. Liz Taylor has broken her back five times.
More details

61. Robins only became a symbol for Christmas in the 19th Century, when postmen - who mostly brought mail at Christmas - wore scarlet waistcoats and were known as Robin Redbreasts.
More details

62. Pet dogs can catch human yawns.
More details

63. Mills and Boon still publish at least one sheikh romance a month.
More details

64. A rooftop luggage carrier increases fuel consumption by 20%.
More details

65. A 72oz steak is about the size of a large telephone directory. And since 1960, 8,000 people have managed to eat one - plus all the trimmings - in under an hour.
More details

66. Misheard song lyrics are known as mondegreens.
More details

67. Twenty-three wedding cakes were made for the nuptials of Charles and Diana.
More details

68. Shetland is the fattest part of the UK.
More details

69. E-mail addresses beginning with "A", "M" or "S" get more spam than those starting with "Q" or "Z".
More details

70. You can dive from 35ft into 12in of water - and only suffer bruising (with a lot of training).
More details

71. Baseball was played in Surrey in 1755.
More details

72. Portraits of famous people often look like the painter instead.
More details

73. Texting impairs drivers more than alcohol.
More details

74. Kenyan women eat stones.
More details

75. The ideal drive is 16 minutes long.
More details

76. Henry V invented passports.
More details

77. Bradford and Bingley has registered the raising of the bowler hat as a trademark.
More details

78. There are two £1m banknotes still in existence. Nine were made after World War II.
More details

79. The word "unbepissed" means "not being urinated on".
More details

80. Goats wear condoms.
More details

81. The world's longest insect is 56cm long.
More details

82. Prince Charles could have had a cameo in Doctor Who.
More details

83. Gay couples can't commit adultery.
More details

84. Stars make noise.
More details

85. The United Arab Emirates, along with the US, has the largest ecological footprint per person.
More details

86. There's a town in Uruguay called Fray Bentos.
More details

87. Barack Obama supports West Ham.
More details

88. Saddam Hussein's yacht had an escape tunnel leading to a submarine.
More details

89. The QE2 does 49 feet to the gallon.
More details

90. The song Two Little Boys was probably about the American Civil War.
More details

91. On the Buses star Reg Varney opened the UK's first cash dispenser.
More details

92. Camel urine is sought after for its medicinal effects in India's Bihar state and sells for £1.34 a litre.
More details

93. Police use curry to hasten the re-emergence of swallowed drugs.
More details

94. The 999 emergency number was chosen over 111 because telegraph wires rubbing together in the wind transmitted the equivalent of a 111 call.
More details

95. The Sydney Opera House was inspired by a peeled orange.
More details

96. A street light costs about 15p a night to keep lit.
More details

97. Emily, of Bagpuss fame, was paid with a bag of sweets.
More details

98. Councils are banning number 13 houses on new developments.
More details

99. Sneezing can be a sign of arousal.
More details

100. Leonard Cohen's original Hallelujah has more than 80 verses.
More details

BBC NEWS MAGAZINE.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home