Original photo by Dmitry Kuzmenko/ Unsplash

Milk and cookies go together like peanut butter and jelly, salt and pepper, Jay-Z and Beyoncé. However, there is a right way and a wrong way to dunk a cookie in milk, according to scientists. In 1998, a professor at the University of Bristol in the U.K. looked into the ideal method for dunking a British biscuit (aka a cookie) into a drink, using the concept of capillary action — the way fluids move spontaneously through small tubes in porous materials — and Washburn’s equation, which describes their journey. Eventually, he determined that the typical British biscuit is best dunked for 3.5 to 5 seconds. Using this same technique in 2016, scientists at the University of Utah’s Splash Lab determined the perfect dunk time for the much-beloved Oreo. Although the amount of time to get to “perfect” depends on preferred sogginess levels and milk fat content, the Utah researchers determined that three seconds was enough to thoroughly saturate the Oreo without losing structural integrity.

Oreos are a copy of another cookie.

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The Oreo looks like the epitome of dessert ingenuity, but it actually got its start as a near-exact knockoff of a cookie called Hydrox, released in 1908. Hydrox eventually lost popularity in part because its name sounded like a cleaning product, but the brand is still around.

Here’s the journey in slow motion. Cookies are porous, and milk travels through the small holes inside them the same way ink does through blotting paper, or a spill through a paper towel. During tests, the Oreo soaked up 50% of its potential liquid weight in one second. That number shot up to 80% at two seconds, flatlined at three seconds, and maxed out at four seconds — meaning the cookie could absorb no more milk. So if the goal was to saturate the cookie but not lose structural cohesion, three seconds was the perfect number. While this test used 2% milk as its dunking medium, the optimal dunking time will vary slightly when using other milk: The higher the milk fat (like whole milk or cream), the longer a cookie can be dunked, but only by mere fractions of a second. Mmmmm, we just made ourselves hungry.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Percentage of creme filling in a “Double Stuf” Oreo compared to the original
186%
Number of mammalian species (Homo sapiens) that drink milk as adults
1
Year the “Oreo Biscuit” was introduced by Nabisco
1912
Gallons of milk an average dairy cow in the U.S. produces each day
7.5

The first “Got Milk?” ad, in 1993, was directed by ______.

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The first “Got Milk?” ad, in 1993, was directed by Michael Bay.

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All humans used to be lactose intolerant.

All mammalian young produce an enzyme known as lactase, which allows babies to digest lactose, a naturally occurring sugar found in milk (human or otherwise). As mammals age, their bodies naturally produce less and less lactase, until eventually milk sugars are no longer digestible. But around 10,000 BCE, a genetic mutation in humans took hold near modern-day Turkey that effectively kept human lactase production permanently set in the “on” position. According to some anthropologists, this gave certain cultures a distinct advantage, since this new lactose tolerance added a pool of easily accessible calories to the human diet. A 2015 study looking at the DNA of Eurasians who lived between 6500 BCE and 300 BCE shows that Russian steppe herders likely introduced the mutation to Western Europe. However, humanity’s ability to digest milk isn’t as widespread as you might think. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimates that 68% of the world’s adult population experiences “lactose malabsorption,” and those percentages are particularly high in Asia and Africa.

Darren Orf
Writer

Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.

Original photo by © Mark Lucey/ Alamy

On November 10, 1885, German inventors Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach unveiled the first motorcycle. Known as the Reitwagen, or “riding car,” it had four wheels: two large wheels plus a pair of small stabilizers (sort of like training wheels) to help keep it upright. 

Indeed, the wooden creation resembled a bicycle more closely than it did a modern motorcycle, and the low-mounted engine drove the rear wheel via a belt at a top speed of only about 7.5 miles per hour. Though crude by today’s standards, it demonstrated new possibilities for compact, engine-powered vehicles that could reliably carry a rider.

Harley-Davidson’s first factory was in a shed.

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It’s a household name now, but in 1903, the Harley-Davidson motorcycle company operated out of a 10-by-15-foot wooden shed behind the Davidson family home in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Just one year after the Reitwagen’s debut, Carl Benz introduced his motorcar, considered the first practical automobile. Benz’s car had just three wheels, a choice that was more practical than stylistic. Three wheels simplified steering, something Benz tinkered with until introducing his first four-wheeled vehicle, the Benz Victoria, in 1893.

The following year, German company Hildebrand & Wolfmüller introduced the first mass-produced, two-wheeled motorized vehicle marketed as a motorcycle (known in German as a “motorrad”). Unlike the earlier Reitwagen prototype, the Hildebrand & Wolfmüller machine rode on just two wheels and was the first motorcycle sold to the public.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Speed (in mph) that earned the world’s first speeding ticket in 1896
8
Toyota Corollas sold worldwide as of 2021, making it the world’s bestselling car
50 million
Year Yamaha started as a musical instrument company
1887
 Minimum fine for any car that exceeds New York City’s 85-decibel noise limit
$800

The official term for a fear of driving is “______.”

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The official term for a fear of driving is “amaxophobia.”

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Folding motorcycles were parachuted out of planes.

World War II sparked a wave of rapid innovation, and one of its stranger byproducts was the Welbike, a small folding motorcycle developed for British paratroopers. Designed to fit inside a standard parachute supply canister, the bike was dropped from aircraft alongside troops and assembled upon landing. 

The U.K.’s Excelsior Motor Company made around 3,600 Welbikes between 1942 and 1943. Though they could be unpacked and quickly ridden at a top speed of about 30 mph after landing, their lightweight design didn’t make them the most durable vehicle, and few Welbikes actually made it into service. The design later influenced civilian bikes such as the Corgi, which started production in 1948.

Nicole Villeneuve
Writer

Nicole is a writer, thrift store lover, and group-chat meme spammer based in Ontario, Canada.

Original photo by peepo/ iStock

For the 2% to 3% of people with genuine ophidiophobia (fear of snakes), not to mention the 50% who just feel anxious about the reptiles, Ireland may seem like heaven on Earth. That’s because throughout its entire modern history, the Emerald Isle has been home to precisely zero endemic snake species. Although one of the nation’s most popular legends tells of St. Patrick driving serpents from the island in the fifth century CE, snakes haven’t slithered along Ireland’s soil since at least before the last ice age. 

Every U.S. state has snakes.

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Although 49 U.S. states have some kind of snake species, Alaska has no resident snake population. Snakes find Alaska’s cold climate and long stretches of darkness too inhospitable. (Hawaii’s snakes are all invasive.) Texas, on the other hand, is home to 105 different kinds of snakes.

Ireland’s geological history makes it perfectly inhospitable for snakes. During the last ice age, the northern latitudes of the British Isles were just too cold for ectotherms (animals dependent on the sun to warm their bodies), so these creatures migrated south. As the ice age receded, glaciers retreated to the poles and water levels rose; the land bridge to Ireland became submerged around 8,500 years ago, whereas the land bridge to England stuck around for 2,000 more years, allowing snakes more time to migrate north as the planet warmed. This is why England has endemic snakes, while Ireland does not. (New Zealand and Iceland lack snakes for similar reasons.)

However, this doesn’t mean you won’t run into any snakes in Ireland. While the island has no endemic snake species, it isn’t illegal to have one as a pet (like it is in Hawaii) — in fact, pet snakes were seen as a status symbol in Ireland during the 1990s. With many people setting their pet snakes free during the economic recession around 2008, it’s possible a few populations of snakes are slithering about, though not nearly in large enough numbers to threaten Ireland’s ecosystem or its residents.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year St. Patrick died (by some accounts) in what is now Downpatrick, Ireland
461 CE
Estimated number of invasive brown tree snakes in Guam, a 210-square-mile island
2 million
Length (in feet) of the Titanoboa, a 60 million-year-old extinct snake and the largest ever discovered
42.7
Number of snake species found in the U.K., including the grass snake, adder, and smooth snake
3

Scientists say the snake that has killed the most people is likely the ______.

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Scientists say the snake that has killed the most people is likely the saw-scaled viper (Echis carinatus).

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Snakes can smell with their tongues.

Have you ever seen a snake flick its forked tongue? Scientists — going back to ancient Greece — have theorized a variety of reasons for why snakes perform this strange tongue dance, hypothesizing about its role in enhanced taste, grooming, or fly-catching. Turns out, it’s none of these things — snakes actually use their tongues to smell. Snakes have limited hearing and eyesight compared to humans, but they make up for it with an incredible sense of smell. Although they do detect scent through their nostrils, they can also use a pair of vomeronasal organs located at the roof of their mouth to follow smells. A snake flicks its forked tongue to create eddies of odor particles in the air, then transports them back to its mouth with its tongue tips, delivering scent to each organ. This allows the snake to not only smell its surroundings, but also discern in what direction a certain smell is strongest. Some scientists have described this process as “smelling in stereo.” When a snake is on the move, especially when hunting, it’ll flick its tongue once per second (or more) to stay on the trail of its prey.

Darren Orf
Writer

Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.

Original photo by andreswd/ iStock

The average American woman is 5 feet, 3.5 inches tall, with genetics playing the largest role in determining a person’s height. Roughly 11% of women in the U.S. are taller than 5 feet, 7 inches, and just 1% reach a height of 6 feet — which explains why seemingly every tall person gets asked if they play basketball, as the average height among WNBA players is 6 feet. 

The average female height in the U.S. is also fairly average in the grand scheme of things, as women in the Netherlands (the tallest country for both men and women) stand an average of 5 feet, 7 inches, and their counterparts in Guatemala (whose women are the shortest) are comparatively diminutive at 4 feet, 11 inches on average. The shortest woman in the world, Jyoti Amge, is 2 feet tall; in 2024, she met Rumeysa Gelgi, whose 7-foot stature makes her the tallest woman in the world.

Short men go bald more often.

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George Costanza wasn’t a fluke — shorter men really are more likely to go bald, as the genes that cause each are linked to one another.

It’s estimated that about 80% of a person’s height is determined by the DNA sequences they’ve inherited, while environmental factors (especially nutrition) are responsible for the remainder. More than 700 of those gene variants — including the ones that affect cartilage in growth plates in the legs and arms — have been discovered, and more are expected to be identified in the future. As for men, the average American stands 5 feet, 8 inches, while the average male height in the Netherlands is 6 feet and in Timor-Leste, the shortest country for men, the average is 5 feet, 3 inches.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Height of Robert Wadlow, the tallest human who ever lived
8’11”
Height of Chandra Bahadur Dangi, the shortest human who ever lived
1’9”
Length a giraffe’s neck can reach
6’
Average height of an NBA player
6’7”

The longest bone in the human body is the ______.

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The longest bone in the human body is the femur.

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James Madison was the shortest U.S. president.

James Madison was the fourth U.S. president, serving two terms from 1809 to 1817. At 5 feet, 4 inches, he was also the shortest. His wife, Dolley Madison, was 3 inches taller than him. Other relatively short presidents include Benjamin Harrison (5 feet, 6 inches), Martin Van Buren (5 feet, 6 inches), William McKinley (5 feet, 7 inches), and John Adams (5 feet, 7 inches), while Abraham Lincoln remains the tallest at a statuesque 6 feet, 4 inches.

Michael Nordine
Staff Writer

Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.

Original photo by Ingrid Pakats/ Shutterstock

Waterfalls are some of the world’s most amazing wonders. Millions of people flock to these water-rushing giants — with names like Niagara, Yosemite Falls, and Iguaçu — to see them up close and in person. However, the largest waterfall in the world has no ticket counter, no gift shop, and no tourists. In fact, there’s nothing at all to see, because this waterfall is entirely underwater. 

The world’s largest human-made waterfall is more than 2,000 years old.

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At an impressive 541 feet, Cascata delle Marmore is an incredible display of Roman engineering. Although they may be known best for their impressive aqueducts, Romans were also in the waterfall-making business, and built this one in 271 BCE to redirect stagnant water to a nearby river.

Nestled between Greenland and Iceland is a body of water known as the Denmark Strait, and beneath its waves lies the world’s largest waterfall. Known simply as the Denmark Strait cataract (a “cataract” is a type of powerful, flowing waterfall), it cascades 11,500 feet toward the seafloor. This incredible deluge — like other underwater cataracts — is actually a dramatic dance between warm and cold water. In the case of the Denmark Strait cataract, cold water from the Nordic Sea meets the much warmer water of the Irminger Sea southwest of Iceland. The cooler, denser water sinks beneath the lighter, warmer water, dropping more than 2 miles to the seafloor. The resulting waterfall completely dwarfs Venezuela’s Angel Falls, the tallest terrestrial waterfall in the world, by more than 8,000 feet. The Denmark Strait cataract is also a staggering 100 miles wide, nearly 15 times wider than the widest terrestrial waterfall, the Khone Phapheng Falls in Laos, which is only 6.7 miles wide. By every single metric, this underwater avalanche towers over the competition — even though it never rises above sea level.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Width (in miles) of the Denmark Strait at its narrowest point
180
Year an enormous ice dam caused Niagara Falls to stop flowing for an entire day
1848
Number of waterfall types, including the punchbowl, plunge, multistep, horsetail, and cataract
10
Length (in seconds) of TLC’s 1994 hit “Waterfalls,” from their second album, “CrazySexyCool”
240

______ is the only waterfall that’s one of the Seven Wonders of the Natural World.

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Victoria Falls is the only waterfall that’s one of the Seven Wonders of the Natural World.

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The world’s largest volcano is also (mostly) under the ocean.

Some 590 miles northwest of Honolulu, a small, unassuming island known as Pūhāhonu (Hawaiian for “turtle rising for breath”) covers only a 5-acre expanse. But underneath the sea, Pūhāhonu is actually the very tip of the world’s largest volcano. Pūhāhonu is a shield volcano, a type of volcano named for its overall shape — which resembles a shield laying on the ground — and in 2020, scientists confirmed that its size surpassed that of the previous record-holder, Mauna Loa. At 36,000 cubic miles, it’s almost twice the size of Mauna Loa, which clocks in at only 19,200 cubic miles. Part of the reason Pūhāhonu remained such a well-kept secret is that nearly two-thirds of its bulk is below the ocean floor, and is covered by debris and broken coral. The volcano is so heavy, it has actually caused the Earth’s crust nearby to sink.

Darren Orf
Writer

Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.

Original photo by Mike Lewinski/ Unsplash

“How hot is lightning?” is a bit of a trick question. Lightning itself doesn’t have a temperature, because it’s just the movement of electrical charges in the atmosphere. (You can think of it as one big spark of electricity that happens when positive and negative charges build up within a cloud, between clouds, or between a cloud and the ground.) But that doesn’t stop lightning from heating up whatever it passes through — in this case, air. Air is a poor conductor of electricity, so it heats up tremendously when lightning strikes. In fact, lightning can heat the air to 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit, which is five times hotter than the surface of the sun.

Lightning never strikes the same spot twice.

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Lightning can indeed strike the same spot twice, and often does. Just ask Chicago’s Willis Tower, which is struck more frequently than any other building in the U.S. — 250 times between 2015 and 2020.

Suffice to say that the air stays extremely hot near Venezuela’s Lake Maracaibo, home of what’s been dubbed the “everlasting lightning storm.” Known locally as Relampago del Catatumbo, or the Lightning of Catatumbo (named for a nearby river that enters into the lake), the phenomenon has been recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as involving the most lightning strikes (250) per square kilometer of any spot in the world. Ten-hour lightning storms occur some 150 times per annum, and lightning itself can be seen up to 300 nights every year.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Speed (in miles per hour) of a lightning bolt
270,000
Lightning strikes per second across the world
44
Times Virginia park ranger Roy Sullivan was struck by lightning, a world record
7
Width (in centimeters) of a lightning bolt
2-3

______ experiences the most lightning per square mile of any U.S. state.

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Florida experiences the most lightning per square mile of any U.S. state.

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People used to think that ringing church bells repelled lightning.

There’s a good reason why some church bells still have the words “fulgura frango” inscribed on them. The phrase, Latin for “I break up lightning,” is evidence of a superstition dating back to the medieval era: that ringing church bells prevented lightning strikes. You might be able to guess how the superstition was proved to be just that — a great many bell-ringers were struck by lightning — but the belief persisted until the late 18th century. It’s far from the only way people once tried to repel lightning, of course. Europeans used to plant Sempervivum tectorum, also called houseleek or hens and chicks, on the roofs of houses and churches in the belief that it somehow prevented lightning and fire.

Michael Nordine
Staff Writer

Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.

Original photo by Greg Balfour Evans/ Alamy Stock Photo

Born to Italian immigrants in San Jose, California, in 1870, A.P. Giannini became a successful produce merchant. He married into a prominent San Francisco family, through which he joined the board of the Columbus Savings & Loan bank. However, the headstrong newcomer clashed with other board members over the practice of lending money solely to affluent clients, and in October 1904, Giannini established his Bank of Italy in a saloon across the street from Columbus Savings & Loan.

Bank of America issued the first wide-scale, all-purpose credit card.

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Introduced in 1958, the BankAmericard marked the first successful attempt to provide users with a credit card that wasn't tied to a specific retailer (like Sears) or industry (like Diners Club).

Thanks to the aggressive courtship of “the little fellow,” i.e., working-class immigrants ignored by other banks, Bank of Italy accrued more than $700,000 in deposits in its first year of business. And when a massive earthquake destroyed much of San Francisco in April 1906, Giannini was shrewd enough to steer his cash to safety from the looting masses. Setting up a makeshift bank on a North Beach wharf, Giannini helped rebuild the community by extending loans on handshake deals. He continued to do so even after the Panic of 1907 threatened to undermine financial progress. By the end of the decade, the astute businessman began buying other banks en route to founding the country’s first statewide banking system. In 1928, he orchestrated a merger between the Bank of Italy and the smaller Bank of America Los Angeles.

Giannini was well prepared to weather the storm that followed the stock market crash of 1929, and he responded by relaunching his enterprise as the Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association in 1930. By the time he died in 1949, Bank of America counted more than 500 branches and $6 billion in assets — the bank of “the little fellow” having clearly outgrown its roots to stand as the world’s then-largest bank.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

National bank charter number of the Bank of Italy/Bank of America
13044
Bank of America employees as of February 2026
213,200
Deposits (in USD) in U.S. banks as of February 2026
18.77 trillion
Career home runs hit by baseball Hall of Famer Ernie Banks
512

The act of charging an excessively high interest rate on a loan is known as ______.

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The act of charging an excessively high interest rate on a loan is known as usury.

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The Italian bank Credito Emiliano accepts cheese as collateral for loans.

Although it sounds like something from an outdated comedy with cringey stereotypes and bad accents, Credito Emiliano has sound business reasons for welcoming cheese as part of its loan operations. Situated in a region filled with Parmigiano-Reggiano farms, the bank understands that the “King of Cheeses” needs a full 18 to 36 months to properly age, forcing its producers to wait for the opportunity to turn a profit. Willing to be patient alongside its clients, Credito Emiliano oversees two climate-controlled warehouses with space to store more than 400,000 80-pound wheels of cheese, as well as a staff of inspectors who keep a close eye on the goods. If a producer defaults on a loan, the bank can turn around and sell the cheese, which can fetch thousands of dollars per wheel. But no one is rooting for such an outcome, as repaid loans provide incentive for Credito Emiliano to continue with this community-minded arrangement, while signaling that a thriving regional industry will continue supplying delicious cheese for all. Mangia!

Tim Ott
Writer

Tim Ott has written for sites including Biography.com, History.com, and MLB.com, and is known to delude himself into thinking he can craft a marketable screenplay.

Original photo by © Craig Taylor Photo/stock.adobe.com

The border between Arkansas and its six neighboring states is quite the geographical oddity. Arkansas shares its approximately 170-mile-long southern border with Louisiana. But you can also travel south from various points in Arkansas and wind up in Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, Texas, or Oklahoma.

Arkansas is home to America’s first national river.

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In 1972, Arkansas’ Buffalo River became the first U.S. body of water designated as a national river. The river begins in the Ozark Mountains and flows eastward for 135 miles, ultimately merging with the White River near Buffalo City.

One of Arkansas’ longest borders is with Missouri, a state largely located to the north. But there’s a region of Missouri at the eastern end of that border, called the Missouri Bootheel, that dips south into what was once Arkansas Territory. The Missouri-Arkansas boundary was originally meant to be a straight line, but the Bootheel was created when some settlers in the Arkansas Territory successfully petitioned for their land to be included in Missouri. As a result, you can technically travel south from the northeasternmost part of Arkansas into its neighbor to the north.

Meanwhile, Arkansas shares its eastern border with Tennessee and Mississippi along the Mississippi River. As the river flows south, it angles west, creating a situation where parts of Arkansas are located north of its two eastern neighbors. And the Arkansas-Oklahoma border to the west is angled in such a way that if you’re located in the northwestern part of Arkansas, you can travel due south to end up in Oklahoma.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

State parks in Arkansas
52
Height (in feet) of Mount Magazine, Arkansas’ highest point
2,753
Year Arkansas’ Hot Springs National Park was established
1921
Meteorites that have been discovered in Arkansas
15

In 1962, ______ opened its first-ever store in Rogers, Arkansas.

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In 1962, Walmart opened its first-ever store in Rogers, Arkansas.

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There’s a state law regarding the official pronunciation of “Arkansas.”

In 1881, the Arkansas General Assembly ended a long-standing debate over the spelling and pronunciation of the state’s name. A formal resolution decreed “Arkansas” to be the official spelling and “Ar-kan-saw” (written phonetically as /ˈɑrkənˌsɔ/) the official pronunciation.

The law’s exact wording states that the name “should be pronounced in three (3) syllables, with the final ‘s’ silent, the ‘a’ in each syllable with the Italian sound, and the accent on the first and last syllable.” In this context, the “Italian sound” suggests an open pronunciation of the vowel /a/, similar to the sound in the words “father” and “pasta.”

Bennett Kleinman
Staff Writer

Bennett Kleinman is a New York City-based staff writer for Inbox Studio, and previously contributed to television programs such as "Late Show With David Letterman" and "Impractical Jokers." Bennett is also a devoted New York Yankees and New Jersey Devils fan, and thinks plain seltzer is the best drink ever invented.

Original photo by Xiangli Li/ Shutterstock

Life as we know it today is less the result of a steady evolutionary flow than a series of cataclysmic fits and starts. To date, the Earth has experienced five mass extinctions, a variety of ice ages, and other climatic changes that have had huge impacts on plant and animal life, often wiping the terrestrial slate clean. However, a few incredible survivors live among us — including magnolias. Named for the 17th-century French botanist Pierre Magnol, these trees have a history that far surpasses the ancien régime. In fact, it’s estimated that magnolias first sprouted on Earth 95 million years ago — smack dab in the middle of the Cretaceous Period. That’s about 27 million years before Tyrannosaurus rex roamed the Earth. 

Dinosaurs and humans are part of the same geologic eon.

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The worlds of dinosaurs and of mammals seem vastly different, but both eras are part of the Phanerozoic — a 541 million-year geologic eon that began with the Cambrian explosion. While half a billion years seems like a lot, the preceding Proterozoic Eon is four times longer.

Back here in the Holocene (the current geological epoch), the magnolia family’s native ranges can be found in East and Southeast Asia and the southern U.S., as well as Mexico, northern South America, and the Caribbean. Although a modern favorite among plant lovers, magnolias still sport evidence of their ancient upbringing. Because they are so old, they evolved to be pollinated by beetles and flies instead of bees, butterflies, or moths. That’s because back in the Cretaceous, those other pollinators didn’t exist yet. Magnolias have tough carpels (the female parts of the flower) to protect themselves from a beetle’s less-than-graceful mandibles, and invest more energy in producing showy, nectar-filled, sweet-smelling flowers in an effort to attract these insects. The beautiful magnolia tree and the flightless beetle may seem like an odd couple, but it’s a relationship that has worked since the Mesozoic.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Months it took for all land-based dinosaurs to die out 65 million years ago
9
Running time of Paul Thomas Anderson’s 1999 film “Magnolia,” starring Tom Cruise and Julianne Moore
188
Years ago that moss, the world’s oldest living plant group, first appeared on Earth
470 million
Estimated number of magnolia species, not including cultivars or hybrids
220

______ is also known as the Magnolia State.

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Mississippi is also known as the Magnolia State.

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The world’s loneliest tree species survived the extinction of the dinosaurs.

In 1895, British botanist John Medley Wood was exploring the Ngoya Forest on the coast of South Africa when he came across an ancient-looking tree. Although he didn’t know it at the time, this particular cycad (now called Encephalartos woodii in his honor) was the only specimen left in existence. Some 250 million years ago, at the dawn of the Triassic, cycads — including Encephalartos woodii — dominated the globe. This particular species survived the explosive asteroid impact that likely snuffed out land-based dinosaurs, and a half-dozen or so ice ages, until only one solitary male specimen was left. That specimen is believed to have died in 1964, although basal offsets of the stem (essentially clones of the original cycad) can be found in botanical gardens around the globe. Alas, Encephalartos woodii needs a female in order to produce naturally, and several expeditions to find a plant partner have failed. Scientists are now trying to create a close approximation of a female woodii by mating the plant with a close cycad cousin (Encephalartos natalensis). With a little bit of luck, maybe one day the world’s loneliest tree will find love again.

Darren Orf
Writer

Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.

Original photo by murat4art/ iStock

Most of us think of rainbows as arches that stretch across the sky, but in reality, every rainbow forms a complete circle. That circle is centered on the point in the sky directly opposite the sun — the same direction your shadow points. From the ground, the horizon blocks the lower half of that circle, so you usually see only the rainbow’s upper arc.

The higher your vantage point, the more of that hidden circle you can see. From airplanes, observers can sometimes view the complete circular rainbow, since nothing blocks the ring’s lower half from that perspective. Photographs taken from research and weather aircraft often capture those full rings floating in clouds, revealing the rainbow’s true shape.

Rainbows can appear at night.

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Lunar rainbows — or moonbows — form when moonlight refracts through rain or mist, just like sunlight does. Because moonlight is faint, they often appear white to the naked eye, but cameras can reveal their full spectrum of color.

A rainbow is formed by the way sunlight interacts with millions of tiny raindrops. As light enters a droplet, it bends (refracts), reflecting off the inside of the droplet, and then bends again as it exits. Those changes in direction separate the light into its different colors and direct them back toward your eyes. Only the droplets positioned at a specific angle relative to the sun — about 42 degrees for red light, for instance — send color your way.

Every raindrop that sends light to your eye does so at the same angle from the point opposite the sun, and all the droplets at that shared angle form a circle around that point, creating that curved colorful band in the sky. Because the effect depends on your exact position relative to the sun, the rainbow you see is tied to your unique viewpoint. Move even a few steps, and a different set of droplets creates slightly different colors. No two people ever see precisely the same rainbow.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Minutes the longest rainbow observation lasted
538
Rainbow colors first identified by Isaac Newton in the 1660s
7
Year Judy Garland sang “Over the Rainbow” in “The Wizard of Oz”
1939
Words and phrases for rainbow in the Hawaiian language
20

The spot directly opposite the sun at the center of a rainbow is called the ______.

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The spot directly opposite the sun at the center of a rainbow is called the antisolar point.

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One of the most recognizable album covers of all time features a rainbow.

The prism and color spectrum on Pink Floyd’s 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon is arguably the most iconic rainbow in rock history. The original album artwork, designed by Storm Thorgerson, depicts a beam of white light entering a triangular prism from the left and emerging on the right as a rainbow — though it omits the indigo band typically included in a full spectrum. 

Kristina Wright
Writer

Kristina is a coffee-fueled writer living happily ever after with her family in the suburbs of Richmond, Virginia.