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One of the most complex parts of human anatomy is also one (or rather two) that we use hundreds of times per day yet often take for granted. Human hands are the body’s multipurpose tools, equipped with 27 individual bones. About half of those are found in our fingers, the tactile appendages that will bend and flex roughly 25 million times over the course of our lifespan. Our fingers are able to perform the everyday tasks we need thanks to thousands of nerve endings and touch receptors that can sense pressure, texture, temperature, movement, and more. But there’s one thing our hardworking digits don’t have: muscles.

Fingernails grow faster than toenails.

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Fingers and toes are topped with nails for good reason: Both help protect our delicate digits by preventing injuries and infections. However, these nails don’t grow at the same speed. A 2010 study found fingernails grow twice as fast as toenails, on average.

Muscles make it possible for our bodies to move, and the human frame relies on more than 600, which are tasked with helping us in nearly every motion. So how do fingers perform the intricate tasks we require without them? Turns out, human fingers are controlled by the muscles in our forearms and the tops and palms of our hands. Small intrinsic muscles in the hand allow the fingers to perform fine motor movements, while extrinsic muscles in the forearm and elbow control how the wrist and hand move. Finger bones (aka phalanges) are connected to these muscles by tendons — fibrous, cordlike connective tissues — and when the attached muscles contract, fingers are able to perform their range of motion. Flexor tendons in the palm help fingers to bend, while extensor tendons on the top of the hand are responsible for straightening the fingers back out — essential movements that allow our hands to touch, grasp, and hold objects.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Bones in each finger, excluding thumbs (which have only two bones)
3
Time (in milliseconds) it takes to snap our fingers, about 20 times faster than blinking
7
Muscles in the human hand
30+
Puppets in the world’s largest finger puppet collection (as of 2023)
1,517

The ______ has copper fingers that measure 8 feet long.

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The Statue of Liberty has copper fingers that measure 8 feet long.

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Some primates have six fingers.

Primates and humans tend to share some similarities, like having five fingers on each hand (along with five toes on each foot). But just like in the human world, there are anomalies among primates — like the aye-aye, a six-fingered lemur. Native to Madagascar, aye-ayes are the world’s largest nocturnal primate, utilizing batlike ears that echolocate their prey. As researchers recently discovered, aye-ayes also differ from their primate relatives by relying on an extra thumblike digit found near their wrist, though it’s unclear just how the finger is used. Aye-aye finger-related differences don’t end there; the lemurs tap their exceptionally long middle fingers against logs and limbs, using the reverberations to eke out an insect’s hiding spot before digging them out.

Nicole Garner Meeker
Writer

Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.

Original photo by EKKAPHAN CHIMPALEE/ Shutterstock

Who knew the California gold rush would spin off a fashion trend that has lasted nearly 150 years? Probably not the gold miners who donned Levi Strauss’ first denim pants. The jeans we wear today as casual apparel initially had a different function, marketed as sturdy work pants that could withstand a day in the mines or manual labor on a farm. And they had a different name, too: waist overalls.

Strauss, a Bavarian immigrant who ran a dry goods store in San Francisco during the 1850s, catered to prospectors and settlers looking to strike it rich in California’s gold claims. But while Strauss’ name is sewn into the history of jeans, the idea for heavy-duty apparel actually came from Jacob Davis, a Reno, Nevada, tailor who was a customer at Strauss’ store. Around 1872, Davis approached Strauss with a concept for work pants that used copper rivets and stitching to bulk up the weakest points of traditional pants; within a year the duo had patented their design for denim workwear, initially available in indigo or brown hues. Strauss marketed the waist overalls under the Levi Strauss & Company name, first commissioning seamstresses to stitch the pants together from their homes before building a factory in the 1880s. Over time, Strauss added designs for other reinforced work clothes such as shirts, true overalls, and coats.

Indigo dye was once used as currency in the United States.

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Denim originally obtained its distinctive color from indigo dye, an expensive pigment so valued that traders exchanged it for goods around the time of the American Revolution. Inexpensive synthetic dyes first emerged in the 1850s, and today, most jeans are colored with artificial hues.

As the gold rush era wound down, the popularity of jeans grew with the help of Hollywood Westerns of the 1920s and ’30s. World War II skyrocketed denim “dungarees” to popularity thanks to their durability; jeans became standard issue for soldiers and factory workers alike. But it was the postwar ’50s and turbulent ’60s that cemented the pants as everyday wear. Actors such as Marlon Brando in 1953’s The Wild One and James Dean in 1955’s Rebel Without a Cause gave denim a counterculture reputation and helped usher in a trendy, new name: jeans, a centuries-old name for denim that originally came from the French name for the port of Genoa, Italy: Génes.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Pounds of cotton needed to make one pair of jeans
1.5
Cost of one pair of Levi’s jeans in the 1880s
$1.25
Approximate length (in feet) of the world’s largest jeans
250
2025 revenue for Levi Strauss & Co.
$6.3 billion

The tiny front pocket sewn onto jeans was originally meant to hold a ______.

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The tiny front pocket sewn onto jeans was originally meant to hold a pocket watch.

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There’s no clear reason why pants come in a “pair.”

While the word “pants” has a generally accepted origin (see below), linguists say there’s no certain answer as to why we identify the one-piece clothing item as a pair. But it could be because some bottoms of the past came in a set of two. The word “pants” is derived from pantaloons, a name for trousers that cropped up in mid-1600s England in connection with the character Pantalone, from the Italian commedia dell’arte, who wore tight breeches and stockings. While most pants and breeches through time have been one piece of apparel, some undergarments — particularly those for women, girls, and young boys during the 18th century — consisted of sleeve-like coverings that were slid on individually and tied together at the waist. Considering that those pantaloons came in a set, some historians believe it’s possible that referring to them as a pair stuck around, even for unsplit trousers. Interestingly, pants are considered plurale tantum — a word only ever used in plural form — which is common among other singular items that have two main internal components, such as tweezers, glasses, scissors, and sunglasses.

Nicole Garner Meeker
Writer

Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.

Original photo by Vidar Nordli-Mathisen/ Unsplash

When we think of pirates, some instantly recognizable iconography comes to mind: eye patches, peg legs, treasure maps, parrots. But as it turns out, only some of these ideas are grounded in truth. For one thing, as far as we know, pirates did not, in fact, make treasure maps. Though they are believed to have buried treasure on occasion — those ill-gotten gains had to go somewhere — there are few documented cases of them doing so, and even fewer (read: none) of them creating a map where “X” marks the spot. Treasure maps are a double-edged cutlass, after all: For as much help as they might be to the pirate in question, they could also fall into the wrong hands. 

Pirates made people walk the plank.

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Like drawing treasure maps, walking the plank is thought of as a classic pirate activity. But there’s little evidence that it ever happened, and it seems we have Daniel Defoe and other writers to thank for creating the myth in the first place.

The myth of treasure maps may have originated with the legendary exploits of Captain William Kidd, who was believed to have buried some of his riches on Gardiner’s Island in the 17th century. Novels like Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island (1881-1882) helped further popularize the idea of buried treasure in general and treasure maps in particular.

In fact, many of our ideas about pirates come more from novelists (and, of course, screenwriters) than from historians, which makes it difficult to separate truth from legend when it comes to the seafarers, who have long occupied an outsized place in our collective imagination. There is some good news, though: It seems likely that some pirates really did have parrots — among other exotic pets.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Estimated possible value of all sunken treasure in the world
$60 billion
Year the golden age of piracy is said to have begun
1650
Pirates active during the golden age
5,000
Cumulative world box-office gross of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” franchise
$4.5 billion

Blackbeard’s real name was ______.

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Blackbeard’s real name was Edward Teach.

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The most successful pirate in history was a woman.

With 1,800 ships and 70,000 men under her command, Zheng Yi Sao — better known as Madame Cheng — is in many regards the most successful pirate in history. A former prostitute who married into the business, she took over her husband’s Red Flags Fleet after his death in 1807. After surviving multiple assassination attempts by the Chinese government, she struck a deal that allowed her to retire peacefully in 1810.

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 tartanparty/ Shutterstock

Yard sales are an American tradition — especially along U.S. Route 127. It’s there that you can find the famous 127 Yard Sale, an annual event on the first Thursday through Sunday in August, featuring thousands of vendors on front lawns and in church parking lots in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and Michigan. All in all, the “world’s longest yard sale” covers 690 miles, starting near Addison, Michigan, and ending in Gadsen, Alabama. The inaugural event took place in 1987, when a Tennessee county executive named Mike Walker conceived of the idea to encourage travelers to bypass the big interstate highways in favor of experiencing life in more rural communities. 

The concept of a yard sale originated at old shipyards.

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The word “rummage” was originally used to describe arranging objects stowed in the hold of a ship. Upon arriving at port, sailors would take all of the leftover and damaged cargo and resell it on the pier — hence the origins of the modern phrase “rummage sale.”

Yard sales aren’t just a great way for vendors to declutter, though — they can also be a literal treasure trove. In 2013, a seemingly nondescript ceramic bowl that had been purchased at a garage sale for $3 in 2007 sold at Sotheby’s for $2.2 million; it turned out to be a 1,000-year-old piece of pottery from the Northern Song dynasty. Even the Declaration of Independence has found its way to the bargain bin — a first printing was purchased at a flea market in 1991 because the buyer wanted the picture frame. It later went on to sell at auction for $2,420,000.

Who knows what treasures await at the 127 Yard Sale? This year’s event is August 6 to August 9, so you still have time to plan your road trip.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year ​​U.S. Route 127 opened
1926
Average number of yard sales held each week in the U.S., as of 2013
165,000
Miles you would have to cover every day to cover the entire 127 Yard Sale route
172.5
Estimated number of items sold at yard sales each week
4,967,500

National Garage Sale Day occurs on the second Saturday in ______.

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National Garage Sale Day occurs on the second Saturday in August.

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Oprah Winfrey hosted a “yard sale” that raised over $600,000 for charity.

In 2013, Oprah Winfrey decided to declutter her various homes and hold a massive auction-style yard sale that she called “the biggest yard sale ever” to support one of her charities, the Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa. The sale included items from her Montecito mansion and three additional properties in Santa Barbara. The value of each item was, of course, boosted through its association with Oprah, including a nondescript teapot worth less than $100 that ultimately went for over $1,000. That’s not to say all the items were so mundane — a set of six 18th-century Louis XVI armchairs fetched $60,000. With that major sale, plus several velvet-clad sofas that sold for $8,750, a print of one of Oprah’s “TV Guide” covers that raked in $3,000, and many more household items, the event — held at the Santa Barbara Polo and Racquet Club — raised more than $600,000 in all.

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 © Dorling Kindersley RF/ Getty Images

Woodpeckers rank among nature’s most extraordinary engineers, especially when it comes to excavation. They use their beaks to hammer away at tree trunks up to 20 times per second. It’s an ability that raises one obvious question: How do they not knock themselves out? For a while, scientists thought part of the answer lay in the woodpecker’s extraordinarily long tongue — a tongue so long it wraps around the bird’s skull. 

A woodpecker’s tongue, when considered in conjunction with the entire hyoid apparatus (a system of bones and muscles that controls tongue movement), originates at the upper beak, runs up the forehead and between the eyes, then loops around the back of the skull before coming out at the base of the lower beak. Some woodpeckers have tongues 4 to 5 inches long, roughly one-third of their total body length. In addition to being extra-long, woodpecker tongues are sticky and covered in tiny barbs at the tip, which helps them extract insects from deep inside tree holes.

Lemurs have a second tongue they use for grooming.

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Lemurs — the small, large-eyed primates that live on the island of Madagascar — have a second tongue, known as a sublingua, located underneath their main tongue. It aids in their social grooming rituals.

For decades, scientists believed those long, skull-encompassing tongues served a second remarkable purpose: protecting the woodpecker’s brain from injury through shock absorption. It’s easy to see why biologists and ornithologists found the idea so compelling; the tongue could quite logically act as a shock absorber around the skull.

Engineers have even modeled football and bicycle helmets on this supposed woodpecker anatomy, implementing liners with multiple layers of different materials and densities. Those designs mimic the woodpecker’s cranial anatomy to create helmets that cradle the head more completely and redirect force away from the brain from multiple angles simultaneously.

For a long time, the incorrect theory about woodpecker tongues protecting the brain gained traction and was propagated online. Then, in 2022, researchers demolished the hypothesis using high-speed cameras. Frame-by-frame video analysis showed that woodpecker skulls act like stiff hammers and don't have built-in shock absorption.

So the tongue wrapping, while real and spectacular, has nothing to do with protecting the brain. What actually keeps a woodpecker’s noggin safe is a combination of its small, tightly fitted brain, the brain’s tilted position within the skull, and the very brief duration of each impact — too short for damaging force to accumulate.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Height (in feet) of the Pentaceratops skull, the largest land animal skull ever discovered
10.5
Depth (in feet) of the deepest hole ever dug into Earth
40,236
Most words ever learned by a bird (a budgerigar named Puck)
1,728
Length (in inches) of the bar-breasted piculet, the world’s smallest woodpecker
3

Woody Woodpecker is the official mascot of ______.

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Woody Woodpecker is the official mascot of Universal Studios.

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A blue whale’s tongue weighs the same as an entire adult elephant.

We sometimes underestimate just how massive a blue whale actually is. Many people assume the largest dinosaurs were bigger than anything in existence today, but that’s not true: The blue whale is by far the largest known animal ever to have graced our planet. An adult can grow to more than 100 feet in length and weigh up to 200 tons — about the same as 30 comparatively puny Tyrannosaurus rexes put together.

The blue whale is so huge that its tongue alone can weigh as much as 4 tons, making it the largest and heaviest tongue in the world by far. To put it into perspective, a blue whale’s tongue weighs about the same as an adult Asian elephant. And if one of those magnificent whales were to open its mouth to a bunch of curious humans, its tongue would have enough surface area to comfortably accommodate 50 standing people.

Tony Dunnell
Writer

Tony is an English writer of nonfiction and fiction living on the edge of the Amazon jungle.

Original photo by © lesniewski/stock.adobe.com

France’s colonial empire reached its peak centuries ago, but it hasn’t been entirely lost to history. There are still five French overseas departments today: Guadeloupe and Martinique in the Caribbean, Mayotte in the Mozambique Channel, Réunion in the Indian Ocean, and French Guiana in South America. 

The last of those is responsible for France’s longest border, which is with the Brazilian state of Amapá and spans 454 miles. With a population of 293,200, about half of whom live in the metropolitan area of Cayenne (the capital), French Guiana also borders Suriname to the west and the Atlantic Ocean to the northeast. France itself borders Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco, Andorra, and Spain; the longest of those, with Spain, stretches 401 miles.

Brazil built a new city specifically to be its capital.

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Brasília was founded in 1960 to replace Rio de Janeiro as the country’s capital. Brasília is more centrally located and was intended to stimulate the economy in Brazil’s interior.

Brazil, meanwhile, borders nine other countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, and Venezuela; the longest of these boundaries, at 2,115 miles, is with Bolivia. (The only South American countries Brazil doesn’t border are Chile and Ecuador.) 

Inhabitants of overseas departments and regions of France (DROM) are French citizens. Their currency is the euro, they elect members of the French Parliament, and they’re beholden to French laws. French is the official language of French Guiana, but French Guianese Creole is widely spoken as well.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Total length (in miles) of Brazil’s international borders
10,492
FIFA World Cups won by Brazil, the most of any country
5
FIFA World Cups won by France
2
Regions of mainland France
13

France’s mainland is nicknamed the “______.”

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France’s mainland is nicknamed the “Hexagon.”

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The world’s longest border is between Canada and the United States.

At 5,525 miles, the border between Canada and the United States is the longest in the world. It spans 13 U.S. states (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington, and Alaska) and eight Canadian provinces/territories (New Brunswick, Québec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and Yukon).

The border isn’t continuous, however, and Alaska alone accounts for 1,538 miles of it. The longest continuous border is between Kazakhstan and Russia, spanning 4,750 miles. Other notably extensive borders include Argentina/Chile (4,185 miles), China/Mongolia (2,877 miles), Russia/China (2,597 miles), and India/Bangladesh (2,574 miles).

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 © Point Normal/Unsplash.com

Most mammals, including humans, have two sets of teeth: deciduous teeth (also called baby teeth or milk teeth), which fall out as the jaw grows to an adult size, and permanent teeth that replace the deciduous teeth and are capable of grown-up biting and chewing. But it’s possible we could even grow a third set.

Some animals, such as sharks, have many rows of teeth that act as a kind of conveyor belt that replaces those that are lost. While humans are far from sharklike tooth factories, we do have something in common with our fishy friends: All of our teeth start out as buds, which are clusters of cells inside the jaw. And research has shown that humans have a third set of tooth buds, which scientists are hoping may lead to the potential for replacing lost teeth or teeth that never developed.

Tooth buds start to grow as soon as a baby is born.

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Tooth buds begin to form very early in embryonic development, around eight weeks gestation, and buds for all of a baby’s deciduous teeth are present before it is born. Some permanent teeth even start to form before birth.

Researchers at Japan’s University of Kyoto are hard at work developing a medication that could stimulate the growth of new teeth in humans. Their first study, conducted in mice, found that the presence of a certain protein could limit tooth growth. Preventing that protein from forming produced the opposite effect in rodents, allowing them to grow new teeth. 

The researchers are hopeful that human dental treatments using this method could be available by 2030. That means in the near future, tooth regrowth could become an option for dental care alongside dentures and dental implants.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Permanent teeth the average human has
32
Deciduous teeth the average human has
20
Percentage of your chewing that’s done with the molars (back teeth)
90%
Portion of the tooth made up of the root, which lies entirely below the gumline
2/3

The outer layer of your teeth, called ______, is the hardest substance in your body.

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The outer layer of your teeth, called enamel, is the hardest substance in your body.

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About 1% of humans have a condition that allows them to grow extra teeth.

Some people are able to grow more than the standard set of teeth — a condition known as hyperdontia. The current Guinness World Record holder for the most erupted teeth in a human mouth is Prathab Muniandy of Malaysia, who has 42 — 10 more than the average adult. 

And in 2011, doctors documented a case of an 11-year-old girl whose dental X-ray showed 18 deciduous (baby) teeth, 32 permanent teeth, and 31 supernumerary (extra) teeth, for a grand total of 81. That makes for a lot of extra flossing!

Ali Eldridge
Writer

Ali Eldridge is a writer and editor based in Chicago. Currently the editor of "What on Earth! Magazine," she has also contributed extensively to Encyclopaedia Britannica and published several books for children. She spends much of her free time learning new languages and trading puns with her clever kid.

Original photo by Chris Willson/ Alamy Stock Photo

In 1998, a fur-covered robot hit store shelves just in time for the holiday shopping season, creating a frenzy among parents. Manufacturer Tiger Electronics had released the first real-life robotic pet: Furby. Partially resembling a hamster (thanks to its scruffy acrylic fur) and an owl (complete with pointed ears and a beak), the computerized toy greeted children and sang to them in Furbish, an entirely made-up language. Furby’s main hook was all about interaction; it could be startled by loud noises, responded to petting, and danced when it was happy, just like a real animal might. But the most innovative feature was that the small robots could supposedly learn English, a gimmick that created a whirlwind of conspiracies, including the idea that Furby was an international spy.

Furby was the first robotic toy to use artificial intelligence.

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A slew of robotic toys emerged around 2000, heralding the millennium with computerized novelties. But Furby was considered the first of its kind to use (rudimentary) artificial intelligence, equipped with sensors that allowed it to respond to humans and other Furbys.

Because Furby was the first toy of its kind, most people didn’t understand how it “learned” language, and the initial fervor was so intense that it led the National Security Agency to ban the toys from its premises; it was also banned from the Norfolk Naval Shipyard and the Pentagon. NSA agents believed the robots were embedded with recording devices that could allow them to listen in on sensitive topics and later replay classified conversations. Tiger Electronics refuted the ban, explaining that while the toy was unique, “Furby [was] not a spy,” going so far as to reveal that the toys were preprogrammed with around 200 words — meaning they didn’t actually learn anything — and that they slowly unveiled their vocabulary the longer a child played. Meanwhile, the outlandish Furby fears (including the belief that it could launch a space shuttle) didn’t slow its popularity; more than 40 million of the revolutionary robots were sold in the first three years.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Original retail price for a Furby in 1998
$35
Tiger Electronics’ estimated development budget for the first Furby
$5 million
Number of AA batteries needed to power a Furby
4
Height (in inches) of a first-generation Furby
8

Furby creators originally named the toy ______.

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Furby creators originally named the toy Furball.

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The FAA was also concerned about Furbys.

Today, personal electronics sometimes seem like the only way to cope with the grueling ordeal of air travel, helping us pass the time with an in-flight movie or music. But that wasn’t always the case — not so long ago, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) prohibited using CD players, laptops, and even Furbys on airplanes. The 1990s ushered in a wave of portable electronics, and with their popularity came a theory that many devices could interfere with a plane’s navigation system, creating chaos in the skies. In an effort to protect passengers and pilots, the FAA banned the use of many electronics during takeoff and landing, including the incredibly popular robotic toy, which had to have its batteries removed before takeoff. No plane control issues were ever attributed to a Furby on board, though there likely was one benefit to powering down the robots while in air: their silence, since many people found their constant chatter grating.

Nicole Garner Meeker
Writer

Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.

Original photo by Andrey_Popov/ Shutterstock

The very first pencils arrived around the dawn of the 17th century, after graphite (the real name for the mineral that forms a pencil’s “lead”) was discovered in England's Lake District. But the eraser didn’t show up until the 1770s, at the tail end of the Enlightenment. So what filled the roughly 170-year-long gap? Look no further than the bread on your table. Back in the day, artists, scientists, government officials, and anyone else prone to making mistakes would wad up a small piece of bread and moisten it ever so slightly. The resulting ball of dough erased pencil marks on paper almost as well as those pink creations found on the end of No. 2 pencils today. 

The writer and philosopher Henry David Thoreau invented a popular American pencil.

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Known best for literary works such as “Walden,” Henry David Thoreau and his family owned a pencil company where Thoreau mixed clay with graphite to make a variety of pencils, including the first No. 2.

But in 1770, English chemist Joseph Priestly (best known for discovering oxygen) wrote about “a substance excellently adapted to the purpose of wiping from paper the marks of a black lead pencil.” This substance, then known as caoutchouc, was so perfect for “rubbing” out pencil marks that it soon became known simply as “rubber.” Even today, people in the U.K. still refer to erasers as “rubbers.” (The name “lead-eater” never quite caught on.) 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year the first patent for attaching an eraser to a pencil was issued
1858
Amount sales rose in two weeks when a Missouri bakery used the world’s first bread slicer in 1928
2,000%
Total U.S. sales of packaged bread in 2022
$27 billion
Pounds per square inch of pressure needed to create graphite in the Earth’s crust
75,000

The Japanese electronics company Sharp is named after the world’s first ______.

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The Japanese electronics company Sharp is named after the world’s first mechanical pencil.

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Yellow pencils were first marketed as a luxury item.

When someone says “pencil,” a slender, yellow stylus topped with a pink eraser likely comes to mind — evidence that a 120-year-old ad campaign is still hard at work. In 1899, hoping to differentiate its pencils from the rest, a Czech manufacturing company named Hardtmuth Pencil decided to paint its “luxury pencil” yellow. At the time, painted pencils were usually red, purple, or black, since darker colors covered up imperfections. Yet Hardtmuth wanted to advertise its top-of-the-line graphite sourced from Siberia. The company went with yellow because of the color’s long association with royalty in China (Siberia’s next-door neighbor). Soon, other companies followed suit, and the yellow pencil became ubiquitous around the world.

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 Lucas Ninno/ iStock

When it comes to the Amazon River, there’s no such thing as water under the bridge. The idiom simply doesn’t apply there, as no bridges cross the Amazon River, despite it being at least 4,000 miles long. This isn’t because the idea has never occurred to anyone — it would just be extremely difficult to build any. The Amazon has both a dry season and a rainy season, and during the latter its waters rise 30 feet, causing 3-mile-wide crossings to grow by a factor of 10 as previously dry areas are submerged. The river bank itself is also in a near-constant state of erosion due to how soft the sediment it consists of is, and there’s no shortage of debris floating in the water.

The Amazon is the longest river in the world.

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The longest river in the world is actually the Nile, which is 4,132 miles long — about 132 miles longer than the Amazon, though counts vary. Third on the list is the Yangtze, at 3,915 miles.

Beyond all those logistical hurdles, there simply isn’t much use for bridges across the massive river. For one thing, there are few roads on either side of the Amazon that need to be connected. The river is, of course, in the middle of a dense rainforest, the vast majority of which is sparsely populated. Other long rivers have numerous crossings, however: The Nile has nine bridges in Cairo alone, for instance, and more than 100 bridges have been built across China’s Yangtze River in the last three decades. For now, boats and ferries are the preferred method of crossing the Amazon, and are likely to remain so for the foreseeable future.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Liters of water released into the ocean by the Amazon every second
200,000
Countries the Amazon passes through (Brazil, Colombia, Peru, and Venezuela)
4
Maximum depth (in feet) of the Amazon
330
Indigenous tribes in the Amazon rainforest
400

The Amazon River originates in ______.

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The Amazon River originates in Peru.

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The Amazon used to flow in the opposite direction.

These days, the river flows east and into the Atlantic. That wasn’t always the case, as it used to flow west into the Pacific — and even both directions simultaneously. This was during the Cretaceous Period, between 65 million and 145 million years ago, and was the result of a highland (mountainous area) that formed along the east coast of South America when that landmass and Africa broke apart. The Andes eventually formed on the western half of the continent, which forced the river into its current eastward flow.

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.