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If we could track our breaths the way many people do steps or exercise, the results would be astonishing. While there’s no app for that, scientists estimate that an average person takes 20,000 to 25,000 breaths over the course of 24 hours. That breaks down to between 12 and 18 breaths per minute for an adult. Children typically breathe more quickly, up to 60 breaths per minute (or as many as 86,000 a day), which tapers down to the adult rate by their teenage years. All those inhales and exhales add up, and by age 50, the average human has taken at least 400 million breaths. Each one helps fuel our bodies; oxygen is a crucial component needed for our most basic functions, like moving muscles, digesting food, and even thinking.

Your left lung is smaller than your right lung.

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Most images of lungs show the organ as being symmetrical, but that’s not true. The left lung has two internal chambers (called lobes, which fill with air when we breathe), while the right side has three. The left lung is also slightly smaller to make room for the heart.

Breathing tends to be an automatic process, but some scientists say that not everyone does it right. Mouth breathing isn’t just annoying when you’re sick or to those around you — it’s actually inefficient for your body. Inhaling through the nose helps heat and pressurize air so that the lungs can extract oxygen efficiently, and the cilia (aka nose hairs) are able to stop particles like pollen and pollution from entering the lungs; neither job can be done by the mouth. Mouth breathing can also cause sleep apnea, snoring, and even asthma. Amazingly, it can change the structure of your face over time; children who primarily breathe through their mouths have a higher chance of having narrow mouths and misaligned teeth.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average amount of air (in gallons) inhaled by a human in 24 hours
5,000
Number of alveoli, aka tiny air sacs, found in human lungs
300 million-500 million
Breaths a cheetah takes per minute while running at top speeds
150
Minutes actress Kate Winslet held her breath underwater while filming “Avatar: The Way of Water”
7:15

The aptly named ______ has both gills and lungs, used to breathe in and out of water.

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The aptly named lungfish has both gills and lungs, used to breathe in and out of water.

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Scientists have found parasites that don’t need oxygen.

Breathing is a requirement for most living creatures on Earth, except one: a parasitic, water-dwelling blob called the Henneguya salminicola. In 2020, a group of scientists from Israel, France, and the U.S. announced they had discovered that the parasite — which is microscopic and typically infects salmon — doesn’t appear to breathe. In fact, it could be the only known nonbreathing animal on the planet. H. salminicola belongs to the same family as jellyfish, which do breathe by absorbing the oxygen in water directly through their skin; however, H. salminicola lacks mitochondrial DNA, a part of the DNA sequence that turns oxygen into fuel to power the body’s cells. Earth is home to many simple, single-celled organisms (like yeast and bacteria) that don’t need to breathe, but H. salminicola stands out because it’s the first known multicellular animal that’s not dependent on oxygen — and researchers aren’t sure why. One theory is that the parasite could get the power it needs to survive by stealing protein from its fish hosts.

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 OlyaSolodenko/ iStock

There’s only one spot outside the nation’s capital that you’ll see featured on some of the seven U.S. banknotes currently in circulation. The $5 bill features the Lincoln Memorial, while the $10 features the Treasury Building — fitting, since Alexander Hamilton, whose visage adorns the obverse, served as the Treasury Department’s first secretary. The $20 and $50 bills finish the architectural tour of Washington with the White House and Capitol, respectively. The $1 is notably absent from this list, as the only building-like structure on its reverse side is a pyramid with a floating eye — and no such pyramid exists in the U.S. (or the world). 

$100 is the highest legal denomination in U.S. dollars.

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The Benjamin isn’t the highest federal reserve note in the U.S. — that’d be the $10,000 bill. First printed in 1918 and featuring the face of Salmon P. Chase, Abraham Lincoln’s treasury secretary, the currency was discontinued in 1969 when Congress purged large denomination bills.

The $100 bill switches things up by featuring Independence Hall in Philadelphia. Although an immensely important building — it’s the site where revolutionaries signed the Declaration of Independence and where the Founding Fathers crafted the U.S. Constitution — it’s also a thematic choice, seeing as Benjamin Franklin (depicted on the obverse of the bill) is undoubtedly Philadelphia’s most famous historical figure. But this isn’t Independence Hall’s only appearance on U.S. currency. A very small section of the interior of the building is also displayed on the 1976 reissue of the $2, which includes a reproduction of John Trumbull’s 1818 painting “Declaration of Independence.” 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Consecutive years Philadelphia was the capital of the U.S., from 1790 to 1800
10
Year the U.S. Treasury Department released a redesigned $100 bill with additional security features
2013
Height (in feet) of Independence Hall’s bell tower
168
Years polymath Benjamin Franklin received a formal education
2

The first U.S. banknotes were created in response to the ______.

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The first U.S. banknotes were created in response to the Civil War.

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No one knows when the Liberty Bell cracked.

Lots of myths surround the Liberty Bell, which hung in the bell tower of Independence Hall for nearly a century (and whose image is also woven into the $100 bill as a security measure). One myth explains how the bell pealed on July 4, 1776, which likely isn’t true; another says it cracked in 1835 to announce the death of Chief Justice John Marshall (also not true).

The story of the Liberty Bell begins in 1751; it was originally cast by a foundry in London, but cracked on its first test ring in Philadelphia. Metalworkers melted it down and cast a new one, which is the Liberty Bell we know today. For 90 years, the Liberty Bell alerted Philadelphians of news or, in Benjamin Franklin’s case, to go to work, as he once wrote in a letter: “The Bell rings, and I must go among the Grave ones, and talk Politicks.” No one recorded when or how the Liberty Bell began to crack, but the most likely reason is the most simple — hard use and time. What historians do know is that metalworkers tried to repair the crack for George Washington’s birthday in 1846, but only made the damage worse. Today, no one alive has heard the Liberty Bell ring with its original clapper, but a digital recreation of the bell’s sound can help transport you back to the early days of the republic.

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 gilaxia/ iStock

A few years into his reign, Russian Czar Peter I (aka “Peter the Great”) decided to study abroad. Worried that Russia was lagging behind in key technological areas, especially when it came to shipbuilding, Peter traveled incognito from 1697 to 1698 to various European countries, including Prussia, Holland, and England, in an effort to modernize his own nation. Afterward, with his newly learned shipbuilding know-how, he created Russia’s first navy.

The Roman Empire taxed urine.

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In Rome, urine was prized for its ammonia, which was used in cleaning products and toothpaste. The urine trade was so lucrative that Emperor Vespasian placed a tax on it in 70 CE. When confronted about the new tax, he famously stated “pecunia non olet,” or “money doesn’t stink.”

But it wasn’t just maritime skills Peter learned on his “Grand Embassy.” He also picked up a few fashion and grooming ideas — including a particular interest in the freshly shaven chins of most Western European men. Determined to integrate Russia into the increasingly powerful club of European countries, Peter established (around 1705) a tax that fiscally punished anyone sporting a beard. The tax was progressive, with the well-to-do shelling out more for their facial adornments than the peasantry; nobility and merchants could pay as much as 100 rubles a year, while peasants might pay one kopek (1/100 of a ruble). Yet the tax was almost universally reviled — and even helped spark a few riots. The biggest opponent of the tax was the Russian Orthodox Church, which regarded clean-shaven faces as sinful. Despite this stiff opposition, Peter I stuck with the tax and was known to even shave off the beards of his guests at parties, much to the horror displayed on their now-clean-shaven faces. 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year Peter the Great’s beard tax was finally repealed (47 years after his death)
1772
Length (in inches) of the world’s longest beard (now at the Smithsonian)
210
Length (in inches) the average beard grows per month
0.3-0.5
The year “No-Shave November” debuted on Facebook in an effort to raise money for cancer patients
2009

When Peter I visited Western Europe, he traveled incognito under the name ______.

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When Peter I visited Western Europe, he traveled incognito under the name Sergeant Pyotr Mikhaylov.

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Sideburns are named after a Union general in the Civil War.

Sideburns have been found on the faces of several famous figures, from Alexander the Great to Charles Darwin, but it wasn’t until the U.S. Civil War (1861-1865) that the term “sideburns” came into being, thanks to a particularly hirsute Union general. Ambrose Burnside wasn’t much of a general: At the Battle of Antietam, his ineffective command meant his soldiers struggled to take a stone bridge (now called Burnside Bridge) and turned what could’ve been a Union victory into a draw. At Fredericksburg, things went from bad to worse, as Burnside led several failed assaults against Robert E. Lee’s forces. But what Burnside might’ve lacked in military acumen, he made up for with his luxurious facial hair, which connected his side-whiskers to his mustache (his chin remained clean-shaven). After the war, many men copied the general’s look, and these facial facsimiles were called “burnsides.” Over the years, the term eventually flipped into its modern spelling.

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 lady_in_red13/ Shutterstock

Human hearts have a big job: moving oxygen and nutrients throughout our bodies. But as much credit as the heart gets, it doesn’t work alone — the adult human circulatory system includes arteries, veins, and capillaries in a network that’s more than 60,000 miles long

In terms of distance, the blood vessels in our bodies are lengthy enough to circle the globe twice, with mileage to spare. What’s more, about 80% of that distance comes from just capillaries, the smallest blood vessels that connect veins and arteries. With each heartbeat, the circulatory system is a multifunctioning wonder, working simultaneously to oxygenate blood, remove waste from our organs, and transport hormones and nutrients to their necessary destinations. Meanwhile, this system also stabilizes our bodies by helping to fight off disease and regulate body temperature.

Larger animals have slower heartbeats than smaller creatures.

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Elephant hearts beat 25 to 35 times per minute, drastically slower than mouse hearts, which pump 450 to 750 times per minute. Scientists believe size is a factor in how fast the heart works; in bigger bodies, it has to work more efficiently to power every cell without wearing out.

Not all living creatures have circulatory systems, and among those that do, they can look drastically different. Vertebrates — mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and birds — have “closed” circulatory systems, meaning that blood is transported through the body sealed within arteries and veins. Invertebrates (think snails, crabs, and octopuses) have “open” systems with no veins, where blood flows freely throughout the entire body cavity and is directly absorbed by the organs. And some animals, such as jellyfish, anemones, and corals, have no blood or circulatory systems at all, instead relying on the water they live in to supply the oxygen and nutrients they need.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average number of human heartbeats per day
100,000
Gallons of blood that pass through the human heart daily
2,000
Number of main blood type groups — A, B, AB, and O
4
Percentage of the U.S. population with type O blood, aka universal blood donors
6.6%

Blood cells are created within ______, the spongy center of bones.

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Blood cells are created within bone marrow, the spongy center of bones.

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One incredibly rare blood type is nicknamed “golden blood.”

Most people who require blood in medical emergencies are able to get the help they need thanks to blood bank donations. However, some people have such rare blood types that they’re unlikely to receive blood thanks to the near-impossibility of finding a match. That’s the case for people with “golden blood,” an incredibly uncommon blood type that lacks antigens, the proteins in red blood cells that help the immune system determine between harmful and beneficial cells. (Matching antigens is important during blood transfusions because it keeps the body from rejecting donated blood.) Technically called Rhnull, this blood type is so rare that doctors have identified fewer than 50 people with it since first discovering the type in 1961. People with Rhnull have miraculous blood cells that are able to save lives in tricky cases where patients have less-common antigens, though undergoing medical care themselves is complex, and often requires doctors to lean on a small network of fellow donors to obtain the blood they need.

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 Dulcey Lima/Unsplash.com

A nickel weighs 5 grams, which isn’t a lot — you could have several in your pocket without even noticing. But the humble 5-cent piece is still heavier than the average hummingbird, which typically weighs between 2.5 and 4.5 grams. (It’s still not a good idea to put a hummingbird in your pocket, though.) 

There are some exceptions — members of the largest species, the aptly named giant hummingbird, weigh around 18 to 24 grams — but most hummingbirds come in at under 5 grams. Some even weigh less than a penny (2.5 grams).

Nickels are mostly made of nickel.

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Nickel accounts for only 25% of a nickel’s composition; copper accounts for the remaining 75%.

Hummingbirds are native to the Americas, ranging from Alaska in the north to Tierra del Fuego in the south. Though they’re a common sight in the U.S., they’re primarily found in Central and South America. Most species don’t migrate, but the rufous hummingbird not only migrates but also has one of the longest migrations in the world: nearly 4,000 miles from Alaska to Mexico, which it completes twice a year. Nickels do quite a bit of their own traveling, as the average coin can stay in circulation for up to 30 years.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Hummingbird species
366
Times a hummingbird flaps its wings per second
50-80
Length (in inches) of a bee hummingbird
2
Estimated number of pennies in circulation
~240 billion

The world’s smallest bird is the ______.

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The world’s smallest bird is the bee hummingbird.

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The U.S. Mint stopped producing new pennies in 2025.

It was a good run, but new pennies are no longer being minted as of November 12, 2025. First produced in 1793, the 1-cent coin had long been considered obsolete by many, in part because the cost of making one (3.69 cents) exceeded its actual value.

Some have speculated the nickel could be next, and for similar reasons — each one costs 13.78 cents to produce, an even greater disparity than that of the penny — but no formal plans to stop production have been made as of 2026. Cash is being used less than ever before, and loose change in particular feels increasingly like a relic of the past, even if nickels, dimes, and quarters aren’t going away anytime soon.

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 CS0523183/iStock

Inventor Ermal C. Fraze may not be a household name like Thomas Edison, but he helped create something we all use today: the pull tab that opens drink cans. Before these convenient pop-tops, people typically opened cans with a can opener or through brute force. That included Fraze himself, who forgot his church key — a small tool used to pierce metal lids — while on a family picnic in 1959. Though Fraze managed to open his beer by physically cracking the lid open against his car’s bumper, he remained frustrated by the need to carry a dedicated beverage-opening tool.

Fraze began brainstorming an all-in-one solution, devising a way to affix a tab to the top of a can with a rivet. His idea maintained the drink’s internal pressure while still making the beverage easy to open — a winning combination that inventors before him had failed to achieve. It was called the “zip-top,” and users could simply pull it off to open a can. In a 1963 interview with The New York Times, Fraze acknowledged that others before him had developed similar ideas but said he was first to “develop a method of attaching a tab on the can top.”

McDonald’s sells beer.

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While it’s not the case in the U.S., many McDonald’s locations in Europe sell beer. The first Mickey D’s to do so was in Munich, Germany, which has been serving McBooze since 1971. The only non-European McDonald's locations that sell beer are in South Korea, where the practice was introduced in 2016.

Fraze obtained a patent for the tab in 1963, selling the rights to the Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa). The invention proved highly popular: The Pittsburgh Brewing Company, which used cans supplied by Alcoa, saw sales of their Iron City beer spike 400% over the next six months. In 1976, Fraze’s idea was improved upon by engineer Daniel Cudzik, who patented the push-in, fold-back tab commonly used today. Unlike Fraze’s original idea — wherein the tab was physically torn off the can, leaving an opening to sip through — Cudzik’s tab simply punctured the lid while remaining affixed.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Servings of Coca-Cola products sold daily around the world
1.9 billion+
Year the element aluminum was first isolated
1825
Percentage of aluminum beverage cans recycled globally (as of 2023)
75%
Year the first electric can opener was patented
1931

______ was the first company to sell beverages in 2-liter bottles.

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Pepsi was the first company to sell beverages in 2-liter bottles.

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Czechia consumes the most beer per capita in the world.

While there are many countries whose locals have a reputation for partaking in a frosty beverage, nobody guzzles more beer than the Czechs. According to data compiled by the Japanese beer brand Kirin, people in Czechia consumed 148.8 liters, or 39.3 gallons, of beer per capita in 2024 (the most recent year for which their numbers were compiled). That marked the 32nd consecutive year Czechia topped the list.

In 2023, Czechia was followed by Lithuania at 110.6 liters per capita and Austria at 104.6 liters per capita. The United States ranked 29th — a drop from 26th the year before — as Americans consumed 65.4 liters per capita. Overall, global beer consumption totaled 194.12 million kiloliters in 2024, which is roughly equal to 547 billion standard 12-ounce bottles of beer.

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 © Richard Stephen/iStock

You can’t alter your Social Security number (SSN) for just any reason, such as if you’d prefer one that’s easier to memorize or that has a better ring to it. But you can request that it be changed based on religious objections — for instance, if it contains the sequence 666, which is widely considered a symbol of the Antichrist or Satan in Christianity, and is defined by Revelation 13:18 as the “number of the beast.”

According to the Social Security Administration (SSA), religious concerns are among the few valid reasons to request a new SSN, along with cases of identity theft, harassment, or two people being assigned the same number (very rare, but it can happen). You can formally request a new one by contacting a local SSA office, and you must provide written documentation from “a religious group with which the number holder has an established relationship” to substantiate the claim. 

The U.S. Congress raised the retirement age in the 1980s.

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When Social Security took effect in the 1930s, the full retirement age (when recipients can claim 100% of their benefits) was 65. But in 1983, Congress passed a law raising the age by anywhere from two months to two years, depending on the individual’s birth year, for anyone born in or after 1938.

It’s worth noting that the SSA never issues Social Security numbers beginning with 666, which automatically reduces the potential for any such religious objections. All SSNs also have a three-two-four digit arrangement, meaning an uninterrupted 666 sequence could only appear within the final four-digit section, thus lessening the odds even further. Still, if someone were to be issued such a number, a religious objection is a perfectly legitimate reason to request a new one — although there’s no guarantee that request would be approved.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year Social Security numbers were created
1936
Average monthly Social Security payment (as of January 2026)
$2,071
Lowest Social Security number issued
001-01-0001
Earliest age at which you can claim Social Security
62

The Social Security Act was signed into law by President ______.

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The Social Security Act was signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

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Germany was the first country to adopt an age-based social insurance program.

In 1881, German Emperor Wilhelm I wrote a letter to Parliament in which he advocated for a state welfare system to support anyone whose age or disability made them unfit for employment. His vision came true within the decade: An age-based pension system was passed in 1889 and took effect in 1891.

This marked the first state-sponsored, age-based insurance program, providing financial aid to retired workers who reached 70 years old and who had also paid into the system for at least 30 years. In 1916, Germany lowered the retirement age to 65, and while it remains 65 today, it’s scheduled to rise to 67 by 2031.

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 Vixit/ Shutterstock

Standing 29,032 feet above sea level in between Nepal and Tibet, Mount Everest is the world’s highest peak. It’s also still growing. While there’s a push-pull dynamic at work in its vertical expansion — plate tectonics push it further into the sky at the same time that erosion does the opposite — the mountain gets about 4 millimeters taller per year on average. That means it’s actually growing at a slightly slower rate than many of its Himalayan counterparts, some of which are rising about 10 millimeters each year.

Mount Everest is the tallest mountain in the world.

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Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is actually taller, but because more than half of its 33,500 feet are underwater, it reaches a much lower point above sea level. The volcanic mountain reaches an altitude of 13,802 feet above the Pacific, which still makes it an imposing peak in its own right.

At least 4,000 people have summited Mount Everest since 1953, although precise numbers vary depending on the source. It’s getting increasingly expensive to do so, however; the average cost in 2017 was about $45,000 per person, and some spend as much as $160,000 on travel, guides, food, and equipment. There are also growing concerns that expeditions up the mountain, which have increased in recent years, are having a negative impact. Both the crowds and the waste they leave behind degrade the mountain, and some have suggested it may be time to cease climbing the summit completely. Even so, adventurous spirits remain called to summit the highest peak on the planet — and will likely continue to feel that way for a long time to come.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Mountains in the world taller than 8,000 meters (26,247 feet)
14
People who have climbed all 14
44
Height (in feet) of Denali, the highest peak in North America
20,310
Countries the Himalayas pass through (China, Nepal, India, Pakistan, Bhutan, and Afghanistan)
6

The world’s second-highest mountain is ______.

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The world’s second-highest mountain is K2.

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George Everest didn’t want the mountain named after him.

Before it was Mount Everest, the world’s tallest peak was officially known as Peak XV for a time — and, if the mountain’s namesake had had his druthers, it might have stayed that way. Sir George Everest was Surveyor General of India from 1830 to 1843, during which time he helped survey the entire Indian subcontinent as part of the Great Trigonometrical Survey. It was for this and other accomplishments that his successor and former pupil, Andrew Scott Waugh, proposed renaming Peak XV (which he identified as the world’s highest peak in 1856 based on work by Indian mathematician Radhanath Sikdar) in Everest’s honor. Everest thought a local name would be more suitable, as his own last name couldn’t be written in Hindi and he had no actual involvement in the mountain’s discovery, but his objections went unheard. Funnily enough, he was more right than he knew about people having trouble with his name — it’s actually pronounced EEV-rest. (Meanwhile, the Tibetan name for the mountain is Chomolungma, or “Goddess Mother of the World,” while the Nepali name is Sagarmatha, or “Goddess of the Sky.”)

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 GarryKillian/ Shutterstock

Flamingos are some of the most striking birds on the planet. Their bright pink plumage is easy to spot in wetland habitats around the world, they eat upside down, and they can fall asleep standing on one leg — a task that’s impossible for most vertebrates. So how (and why) do flamingos pull off this impressive feat? For years, scientists believed it was because flamingos conserved heat by retracting their other leg into their body — similar to how a cat “loafs” to conserve warmth. However, this didn’t quite square with most birds’ physiology. So a study in 2017 went back to the proverbial drawing board, analyzed both dead and living flamingos, and discovered the answer has to do with some surprising physics.

Flamingos are pink because of mating displays.

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Flamingos are pink because of the food they eat. A flamingo’s diet involves a steady course of algae and small crustaceans, both filled with an orange pigment called beta carotene. Over time, this diet steadily turns flamingos from a dullish gray to a brilliant pink.

Scientists placed juvenile flamingos on what amounted to a highly sensitive bathroom scale to analyze the miniscule muscle movements in their legs and feet. When the birds slept on one leg, swaying decreased sevenfold compared to when they were standing or grooming on two legs. Scientists also realized that flamingos can passively lock their knee, which is located close to their trunk (the visible joint we see is actually their ankle), and then stabilize their center of gravity over this leg. Doing so doesn’t seem to require any conscious activity or muscle effort, as even dead flamingos were capable of doing it. The one-legged pose thus allows flamingos to expend less energy while they snooze — even if it looks a little unconventional.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Maximum wingspan (in feet) of the greater flamingo
5
Year the famous John Waters film “Pink Flamingos” was released
1972
Number of flamingo species, including the American flamingo
6
Approximate pounds of plastic transformed into flamingo lawn ornaments every year
270 million

A group of flamingos is called a ______.

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A group of flamingos is called a flamboyance.

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For more than a century, flamingos were considered an invasive species in Florida.

In the U.S., the American flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber) is found almost exclusively in southern Florida — but for more than a century, the Sunshine State considered the bird an invasive species. Because of widespread hunting, flamingos stopped nesting in Florida at the turn of the 20th century. In the decades following, it was often assumed that any wild flamingos one spotted had escaped from captive colonies. However, research in 2018 using satellite trackers, aerial surveys, and historical reports (including accounts from 19th-century feather traders) concluded that the American flamingo is most likely originally native to southern Florida. This simple distinction carries big implications for the bird’s protection in the state, as well as protection of its wetland habitat. Today the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission considers the American flamingo a native resident, but has declined to consider them “state threatened” in part due to their overall low population in Florida. That could change if these brilliant pink birds continue to return to their ancestral home.

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 Peter Ekvall/ Alamy Stock Photo

Decades before doctors began to publicize the harmful effects of cigarettes, a 30-year-old Austrian executive decided to invent a refreshing alternative. In 1927, Eduard Haas III was managing his family’s baking goods business — the Ed. Haas Company — when he expanded the product line to include round, peppermint-flavored treats known as PEZ Drops. The German word for peppermint is “pfefferminz,” and Haas found the name for his new candies by combining the first, middle, and last letters of the German term.

Clever advertising built national demand for the candy, which adopted its iconic brick shape in the 1930s and eventually nixed the “Drops.” They were marketed to adults with slogans like, “Smoking prohibited, PEZing allowed!” Originally, they were packaged in foil paper or metal tins until Haas hired engineer Oscar Uxa to devise a convenient way of extracting a tablet single-handedly. Uxa’s innovation — a plastic dispenser with a cap that tilted backward as springs pushed the candy forward — debuted at the 1949 Vienna Trade Fair. 

PEZ once came in a chlorophyll flavor.

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There are only a handful PEZ flavors available in the U.S., but other flavors are sold around the world — and still others have been discontinued. Among the flavors you can’t find anymore are liquorice, coffee, and, yes, chlorophyll.

A U.S. patent for the dispenser was obtained in 1952, but Americans of the day showed little interest in giving up smoking. So PEZ replaced the mint pellets with fruity ones and targeted a new demographic: children. In 1957, after experimenting with pricey dispensers shaped like robots, Santa Claus, and space guns, PEZ released a Halloween dispenser that featured a three-dimensional witch’s head atop a rectangular case. A Popeye version was licensed in 1958, and since then PEZ has gone on to produce some 1,500 different novelty-topped dispensers. An Austrian original that was revolutionized in America, PEZ is now enjoyed in more than 80 countries — and it’s still owned by the Ed. Haas Company.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Pressure (in pounds) the raw ingredients in PEZ undergo to become tablets
3,000
PEZ dispensers used to create the world’s largest PEZ dispenser sculpture, a replica of London’s Big Ben
9,404
Price a Prince Harry and Meghan Markle set of PEZ dispensers earned in a 2018 charity auction
$9,893
Minimum amount of individual PEZ candies eaten annually in the United States
3 billion

The all-time bestselling PEZ dispenser features ______.

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The all-time bestselling PEZ dispenser features Santa Claus.

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Hollywood almost made an animated PEZ movie.

The Lego Movie exceeded all box-office expectations by becoming the fourth-highest-grossing domestic film of 2014. Producers immediately started brainstorming about other nostalgia-inducing objects that could anchor an animated comedy. Envision Media Arts found a worthwhile property in PEZ, greenlighting a feature and hiring a screenwriter in 2015, yet no director or cast was ever announced. According to the Envision Media Arts website, “PEZ” remains in development, though it’s now listed as a TV show. In the meantime, anyone seeking a big-screen PEZ tribute can revisit the 1986 classic Stand by Me. In the Rob Reiner-directed film, 12-year-old Vern Tessio (Jerry O’Connell) contends, “If I could only have one food to eat for the rest of my life? That’s easy, PEZ. Cherry-flavor PEZ. No question about it.”

Jenna Marotta
Writer

Jenna is a writer whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Hollywood Reporter, and New York Magazine.