Original photo by Adisha Pramod/ Alamy Stock Photo

Immortality is the dream of ancient mystics and futuristic transhumanists alike, but for humans and most other animals on Earth, the promise of such longevity remains out of reach — that is, unless you’re a jellyfish known scientifically as Turritopsis dohrnii, nicknamed the “immortal jellyfish.” The life cycle of most jellyfish begins with a fertilized egg that grows to a larval stage called a planula. Eventually, the planula attaches itself to a surface, and forms into a tubelike structure known as a polyp. These polyps eventually bud and break away into an ephyra, aka a young jellyfish, and these floating youngsters then develop into adult medusae capable of sexual reproduction.

Jellyfish are fish.

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Jellyfish aren’t fish — they’re an invertebrate in the phylum Cnidaria. Marine biologists often prefer using the terms “jelly” and “sea jelly” for this reason.

Most species of jellyfish call it quits at this point, and eventually die like every other species on Earth — but not Turritopsis dohrnii. Instead, when this creature becomes damaged for whatever reason, it can revert to a blob of living tissue that eventually turns back into a polyp, and once again its developmental process repeats. Of course, this jellyfish isn’t immune to the numerous dangers of the ocean — whether from predators or climate change — but if left to their own devices, these incredible creatures can just go on living forever. 

Although the immortal jellyfish is a longevity outlier in the animal kingdom, there are a few other organisms that can pull off similar feats. Planarian worms display a limitless ability for regeneration, and can become two worms when cut in half. Additionally, the bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans is resistant to basically everything, as it can reassemble its genome and effectively return to life even after intense heat or radiation — a feat that earns the hardy bacterium the fitting nickname “Lazarus microbe.” Maybe immortality isn’t so impossible after all.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Minimum number of years ago that scientists estimate ancestors of jellyfish first roamed the oceans
500 million
Estimated age (in years) of Methuselah, a bristlecone pine in California that scientists say could also be immortal
4,800
Percentage of a jellyfish’s body that is water
95%
Length (in feet) of the tentacles of the largest lion’s mane jellyfish on record
120

A group of jellyfish is known as a “______,” though sometimes it’s called a “bloom” or “swarm.”

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A group of jellyfish is known as a “smack,” though sometimes it’s called a “bloom” or “swarm.”

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Jellyfish do not have a brain (or a heart).

Most animals, whether a minuscule fruit fly or a complex human, have a central nerve center known as the brain. However, jellyfish don’t follow this seemingly basic biological blueprint. Instead, jellyfish rely on two separate nervous systems: The “large nerve net” controls swimming, while the “small nerve net” is essentially responsible for everything else. Even without a brain, jellyfish perform complex actions, especially when feeding and mating, suggesting that brains aren’t a requirement when it comes to defining life on Earth. In fact, jellyfish might be better at the whole “living” thing than many animals — biologists say that they’ve survived every single extinction event in Earth’s history.

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 FamVeld/ Shutterstock

Most animals with eyes produce tears, but only one releases them in moments of sorrow and joy: humans. Creatures throughout the animal kingdom also feel emotion, but humans are the biological anomaly for being able to stream tears down our faces during times of emotional upheaval or relief — and scientists remain perplexed about exactly why. 

Babies are born without functioning tear ducts.

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Newborns cry a lot, and those early bouts of bawling are usually dry runs, leading some parents to believe their babies don’t have tear ducts. They do. At first the glands produce a scant amount of tears just for eye lubrication, but they increase to full-on waterworks in four to 12 weeks.

Unusual theories have cropped up over time: Aristotle believed the act of crying was simply to help clear our minds from suppressed feelings. Some have believed tears help cleanse the body of toxins. In the 1600s, it was common to think that our feelings heated the heart, which produced water vapor to cool itself that escaped through our eyes. Danish scientist Niels Stensen’s 1662 discovery of the lacrimal gland — located at the outer corner of each eye, and the origin point of our emotional tears — helped disprove that theory, though Stensen believed tears only moisturized our eyes. Even famed British naturalist Charles Darwin considered emotional tears to have no real benefit, though today’s scientists have a competing idea, believing that crying may provide a social cue to other humans that we need help; after all, babies cry an astounding amount and need round-the-clock attention.

Human eyes actually produce three types of tears, all with different purposes. Basal tears help to clean and lubricate the eyes, while reflex tears are a response to our environment (they appear when we cut onions). Emotional tears are the only kind we have some control over, and they have a slightly different chemical composition with more protein that may help them better stick to our faces.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average number of hours newborn babies cry each day until around 6 weeks old
2.25
Gallons of tears produced by the human body each year
15-30
Weeks Tears For Fears’ “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” topped the Billboard chart in 1985
2
Percentage of tears made up of water (the remaining 2% is salt, oils, and proteins)
98%

Picasso’s 1937 “Weeping Woman” was painted during the ______ War.

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Picasso’s 1937 “Weeping Woman” was painted during the Spanish Civil War.

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Scientists believe at least 65 animal species can laugh.

Many researchers once thought that only humans exhibited glee through laughter, but a 2021 study from UCLA found that more than 65 different animal groups may also laugh, or at least exhibit what researchers called “vocal play behavior,” when feeling playful. Some of the chuckling critters include ones you might expect, such as primates and dogs, along with a few unusual contenders, such as foxes, seals, and mongooses. However, laughter across the animal kingdom doesn’t always sound the same as human giggles. Take, for example, rats, who researchers believe may enjoy being tickled, but whose laughs are inaudible to humans thanks to their high frequency, and can be heard only with the help of specialty microphones.

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 PeopleImages/ Shutterstock

If you’ve ever seen someone track their pulse (in real life or on a crime drama), you’ll notice that the index and middle finger are always pressed on the neck’s carotid artery, which is responsible for transporting blood to the brain. There’s a reason why doctors (and actors who play doctors on TV) use these fingers and not, say, their thumbs. While your thumb is good for many things, taking your pulse isn’t one of them. Unlike the other four digits, the thumb has its own exclusive artery, the princeps pollicis, which makes it biologically unreliable as a pulse reader — because you’ll feel it pulse instead of the artery in your neck.

Today’s “thumbs up” gesture comes from ancient Rome.

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Today, “thumbs up” means liking things, whether YouTube videos or Facebook posts. But this positive gesture likely comes from WWI pilots, who used the hand signal to give the “OK” on preflight checks.

Among the 34 muscles, 29 bones, and three major nerves in the hand, there are also two key arteries supplying blood to the area: the ulnar and the radial. The ulnar artery branches at the wrist into a network of blood supply vessels called the superficial palmar arch, which then branches to supply blood to the top four fingers. The radial artery, meanwhile, branches at the wrist into the deep palmer arch, which then branches into the princeps pollicis artery, sending blood to the thumb. But today, there are more modern methods of tracking your pulse that use technology in lieu of touch. The Apple Watch, one of the most popular consumer fitness-tracking devices, relies on a process called “photoplethysmography,” which leverages the fact that blood reflects red light and absorbs green light. The watch uses green LED lights that flash hundreds of times per second, as well as light-sensitive photodiodes that help measure the amount of green-light absorption, and thus blood flow and pulse — no fingers (and definitely no thumbs) required.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Beats per minute of a pygmy shrew’s heart, the fastest pulse of any mammal
1,200
Number of times a human heart beats per year, on average
35 million
Rough number of years ago the opposable thumb evolved in early human ancestors
2 million
Release year of “Thumb Wars,” a parody film that replaces “Star Wars” characters with thumbs
1999

The World Thumb Wrestling Championships are held every year in ______.

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The World Thumb Wrestling Championships are held every year in Suffolk, England.

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Thumbs gave humans a significant evolutionary advantage.

Of the many biological advantages human evolution has brought us, two of the biggest are our brains and our thumbs. While the utility of our brain is pretty obvious, it’s our opposable thumbs that do much of the work of day-to-day life. In fact, some scientists credit our thumbs as a driving force behind human culture. Around 3 million years ago, early hominids such as Australopithecines used primitive tools — basically just sticks and rocks — and possessed hands similar to a chimp’s. A million years later, as our early ancestors began migrating out of Africa, increased manual dexterity thanks to improved opposable thumbs gave rise to more complex culture, because of the variety of tools these early species could now manipulate. Eventually, starting some 300,000 years ago or so, Homo sapiens began grasping all the tools that make modern life possible — whether a philosopher’s quill, a carpenter’s hammer, a warrior’s weapon, or a TikToker’s iPhone.

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 Mary Swift/ iStock

While dogs are often touted as man’s best friend, cats can be so aloof that they seem like little more than a passing acquaintance. However, there is more going on between felines and their human owners than a cat’s sometimes steely exterior may suggest. In October 2022, researchers from France published results from an experiment examining the relationship cats have with their owners’ voices. In the study, cats responded more positively to a familiar human voice (swishing tails, pivoting ears, pausing grooming) than when they heard the voice of a stranger. 

Cats have more bones than humans do.

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Humans have 206 bones, but the average cat has 244. A majority of these extra bones are found in a feline’s long tail and backbone. Where humans have up to 34 vertebrae, cats have some 53 vertebrae, giving them additional flexibility and twisting ability.

This builds on previous research from 2013 that found a similar connection between a familiar voice and its effects on a cat — though none of the felines in that study even bothered to get up in response to the voices they recognized. Unlike dogs, cats were never domesticated to follow a human’s orders, and instead were the product of a more symbiotic relationship, as the rise of agriculture gave rise to rodents and other pests for cats to hunt.

The French researchers also studied how owners spoke with their pets; specifically, if they used cat-directed speech — aka baby talk — which is known to positively impact both babies and canines. (In fact, babies learn words more quickly when listening to baby talk.) Owners’ voices were recorded asking questions such as “Do you want to play?” and “Do you want a treat?” using both cat-directed speech and human-to-human conversational speech. Like dogs and babies, cats reacted more positively to cat-directed speech than to an owner’s normal speaking voice.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Age of Creme Puff, the oldest known domestic cat to ever live (recorded in 2004)
38
Year of the earliest known human voice recording, using a phonautograph
1860
Possible number of different sounds a cat can make
21
Sound (in decibels) of the world’s loudest human voice when screaming
129

The oldest fossilized evidence of a pet cat comes from ______.

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The oldest fossilized evidence of a pet cat comes from Cyprus.

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There’s a scientific reason why you hate listening to your own voice.

Hearing a recording of your voice can be an unpleasant experience, as the sound isn’t usually what you expect. To put it simply, hearing works by something called “air conduction,” in which sound waves travel to our ears’ cochleas, which in turn stimulate nerve axons that send signals to the brain — but that’s not what happens when we speak. While some air conduction occurs when we hear ourselves talking, most sound is translated through “bone conduction,” particularly our skull bones. This blend of both air and bone conduction gives our voice a deeper, richer low end, which explains why most people perceive their voices as higher-pitched when listening to a recording.

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 Chris Nunez/ Shutterstock

If you want to see the 19th-century version of London Bridge, don’t travel to London — or even England, for that matter. Instead, head to Lake Havasu, Arizona, where a U.S. businessman by the name of Robert McCulloch moved the bridge after buying it in 1968. That the landmark structure was even for sale was the result of English officials realizing the bridge was sinking, albeit at the relatively slow pace of 1 inch every eight years. And so, after a tenure of some 130 years — a bit shabby, when you consider that its medieval predecessor stood for more than 600 — that iteration of London Bridge was put on the market after London City Councilor Ivan Luckin convinced his colleagues that he could persuade someone in America to buy it. 

London Bridge is the tallest bridge in central London.

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Tower Bridge, which is often mistaken for London Bridge, is taller, at a height of 213 feet. London Bridge is a bit longer, however — about 882 feet to Tower Bridge’s 800. If you go just outside of London, the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge is taller and longer than both of them.

He was right, of course, and it made sense that McCulloch would be the one to purchase it. An eccentric industrialist who once attributed his success to “booze and broads,” McCulloch jumped at the opportunity to bring a piece of history to a patch of land he was hoping to turn into a haven for tourists. Buying the bridge for the princely sum of $2.46 million was the easy part — it was disassembling and moving it, granite brick by granite brick, that turned out to be a logistical nightmare. Three years and another $7 million later, London Bridge settled in its (apparently) final resting place on October 10, 1971. Today, it’s one of Arizona’s top attractions.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Length (in feet) of the medieval London Bridge
926
Length (in miles) of Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge, the world’s longest
102
Year the first London Bridge made of stone was completed
1176
Annual visitors to Lake Havasu
835,000

The world’s tallest bridge is in ______.

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The world’s tallest bridge is in China.

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No one knows who the “fair lady” in “London Bridge Is Falling Down” was.

As is the case with many nursery rhymes, the precise origins of “London Bridge Is Falling Down” are hard to pin down. Also as with many nursery rhymes, they’re assumed to be fairly dark. Though everything from a bridge suffering normal wear and tear to child sacrifice has been floated as a possible interpretation, the most widely held belief is that “London Bridge” is about King of Norway Olaf II and his fellow Vikings allegedly destroying said bridge in the early 1000s. As for the fair lady, there’s even more disagreement about her true identity. Some think the reference is to the Virgin Mary, whom Londoners credited with protecting the rest of their city from similar destruction, while others believe Eleanor of Provence or another royal consort is the lady in question.

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 Composite_Carbonman/ Shutterstock

Few synthetic polymers have saved as many lives as poly-para-phenylene terephthalamide, better known as Kevlar. These super-resilient, nylon-like threads are five times stronger than steel, lighter than fiberglass, incredibly heat-resistant, and fantastically flexible. Although the material is found in a variety of items from kayaks to NASA spacecraft, Kevlar has arguably made the greatest impact in bulletproof vests and body armor. But Kevlar’s incredible, lifesaving superpower is only a happy byproduct of its original purpose — creating a new kind of car tire.

Kevlar is the strongest known material.

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Kevlar is strong, but it doesn’t outdo nature. In 2019, scientists discovered that the Darwin's bark spider (Caerostris darwini), a Madagascar arachnid, produces silk with a tensile strength 10 times stronger than Kevlar, making it one of the world’s toughest materials.

In the mid-1960s, chemist Stephanie Kwolek was working in a Wilmington, Delaware, research lab for the textile division of the chemical company Dupont, which had invented another “miracle” fiber called nylon 30 years earlier. Fearing a looming gas shortage — one that arrived in earnest in 1973 — Dupont was searching for a synthetic material that could make tires lighter and stronger, replacing some of their steel and improving overall fuel efficiency. One day, Kwolek noticed that a particular batch of dissolved polyamides (a type of synthetic polymer) had formed a cloudy, runny consistency rather than the usual clear, syrupy concoction. Although colleagues told Kwolek to toss it out, she persisted in investigating this strange mixture closely, discovering that it could be spun to create fibers of an unusual stiffness. Thus, Kevlar was born. Dupont introduced the “wonder fiber” in 1971, and the material began undergoing tests in ballistic vests almost immediately. By one estimate, it has saved at least 3,000 police officers from bullet wounds in the years since. Despite its myriad applications, Kevlar still delivers on its original purpose as an automotive component, whether baked into engine belts, brake pads, or yes, even tires.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Branches of chemistry (organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, and biochemistry)
5
Kevlar vests sold at the time of Stephanie Kwolek’s death in 2014
1 million
Year the National Institute of Justice released a report saying Kevlar was effective at stopping bullets
1976
Percentage oil prices jumped in the U.S. during the 1973 energy crisis
350%

Some historians trace the beginning of modern chemistry to the discovery of ______ in 1774.

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Some historians trace the beginning of modern chemistry to the discovery of oxygen in 1774.

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The top speed of the world’s fastest cars is mostly limited by their tires.

Rubber tires can go only so fast. The centrifugal force of speeds approaching 300 mph creates an incredible amount of pressure and heat that normal tires just can’t handle. Because of this, supercars such as the $3.8 million Bugatti Chiron can’t reach the top speeds its 1,500-horsepower engine might technically achieve (around the 310 mph mark). This physical limitation is why land speed record-breaking vehicles — which are more like wheeled rockets than cars — get rid of rubber entirely and ride on aluminum alloy wheels instead. Undeterred, the tire company Michelin developed all-new tires for the Chiron, reinforcing the rubber with carbon fiber and testing them with the same equipment NASA used to test the wheels for space shuttles. In 2019, these reinforced tires helped the Chiron reach 304.77 mph — a new speed record for any car with street-legal tires (rocket cars not included).

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 © Andrej Lišakov/Unsplash.com

You’re never more than 135 miles from a McDonald’s in the continental United States, and the vast majority of the time you’re much closer. For how ubiquitous the golden arches are, however, the fast-food giant’s 14,300 locations are outnumbered by something completely different: public libraries, of which there are more than 17,000 in the U.S. 

In addition to lending physical books, libraries offer everything from free internet access to language courses to streaming services. Some even have collections of objects, which allow anyone with a library card to check out musical instruments, cooking utensils, hardware tools, and other useful items they may not already own.

There are more McDonald’s locations in the U.S. than any other fast-food franchise.

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Subway has more than 20,000 locations, making it the biggest fast-food franchise in the country by that metric.

Though it’s practically synonymous with America, McDonald’s is a global chain. It operates more than 36,500 restaurants in more than 100 countries, meaning the U.S. accounts for fewer than half its locations. As there are more than 405,000 libraries in the world, they have McDonald’s beat there as well.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

U.S. cities with a McDonald’s
5,036
Items in the Library of Congress
173 million
Cost of a Big Mac when it debuted in 1967
45¢
U.S. libraries funded by Andrew Carnegie
1,700

McDonald’s bestselling menu item is ______.

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McDonald’s bestselling menu item is french fries.

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McDonald’s is one of the biggest real estate companies in the world.

As anyone who’s seen The Founder knows, McDonald’s didn’t make all its money from selling Big Macs. “We are not technically in the food business,” former CFO Harry J. Sonneborn has been quoted as saying. “We are in the real estate business. The only reason we sell 15-cent hamburgers is because they are the greatest producer of revenue, from which our tenants can pay us our rent.”

McDonald’s now stands as one of the biggest real estate companies in the world, with more than $42 billion in land holdings. Each franchise is built on land McDonald’s owns — land it then leases to franchisees. More than one-third of the chain’s revenue comes from that rent.

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 © Tatiana Kutina/iStock

There’s a good, if complicated, reason Easter can be celebrated anytime between March 22 and April 25. It’s a movable feast, meaning it doesn’t take place on the same day every year, but it does always fall on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the spring equinox. 

That means the holiday can fall on 35 possible dates, some of which don’t repeat for centuries. In 2025, it landed on April 20, which was also the date of Easter in 2014 and 2003; before the 21st century, though, Easter hadn’t been on April 20 since 1930. The date is tied to the lunar cycle, a repeating pattern that tends to coalesce around a relatively small number of days even over long periods of time, and the fact that Easter always falls on a Sunday limits the likely number of days more than the possible number of days.

Buttered Popcorn is the most popular Jelly Belly flavor.

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Though Buttered Popcorn did hold the record between 1998 and 2003, Very Cherry has been No. 1 ever since.

Much more rare is the earliest possible date: March 22. Easter was most recently celebrated on that date in 1818, but that won’t happen again until 2285. The latest possible date, April 25, is also exceedingly rare: The last time Easter was observed on that date was in 1943, and it won’t be again until 2038. Even more extreme is March 24, which is in the middle of a nearly five-century gap from 1940 to 2391.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Easter eggs gifted by England’s King Edward I to his royal entourage in 1290
450
Eggs hidden at a 2007 Easter egg hunt held in Florida
501,000
Hours it took to make one Peep in 1953
27
Height (in feet) of the world’s largest chocolate Easter egg
34

______ invented the Easter Bunny.

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Germany invented the Easter Bunny.

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Switzerland has an Easter bird instead of a bunny.

Not every country acknowledges the Easter Bunny. In Switzerland, for example, Easter eggs are instead brought by a cuckoo — which, when you think about it, makes more sense considering the fact that rabbits don’t lay eggs.

Easter celebrates rebirth, hence the focus on eggs, which in Switzerland are hard-boiled and decorated. The cuckoo is considered a symbol of growth and renewal in Switzerland, which explains its connection to Easter.

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.

Interesting Facts

One Gettysburg memorial stands out for its strikingly modern appearance, featuring a man in a midcentury suit and tie, no musket or battle flag in hand. The statue honors Albert Henry Woolson, the last surviving Civil War veteran, as he appeared at age 106, nine decades after the war’s end. At the time of his death in 1956, Woolson had outlived more than 2 million Union Army soldiers

One American Civil War battle took place in France.

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An 1864 battle between the USS Kearsarge and CSS Alabama took place off the French coast. Known for plundering Union supply ships, the Alabama was finally cornered by the USS Kearsarge while docking for repairs in France. The Confederate raider sank after taking several hits.

Born in New York in 1850, Woolson (like many young recruits) likely lied about his age to enroll in the Union Army in 1864. He was accepted into the ranks at age 14, served as a drummer boy and bugler, and eventually was stationed in Chattanooga, Tennessee, a commission that kept him from combat.

After the war, Woolson held a variety of jobs, including teaching both mechanical engineering and music. He also became a living link with history, speaking at local schools about his experience and receiving letters and visits from around the country. As a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, a fraternity for Union veterans, Woolson met with other surviving veterans; the group, which had more than 400,000 members in 1890, had whittled down to only 16 men by 1949. Six of the Civil War veterans met in Indianapolis that year, including Joseph Clovese, the last formerly enslaved soldier. Called the “Grand Old Men,” the group paraded through the streets one final time. Woolson’s funeral a few years later would also attract a crowd. More than 1,500 people attended the burial, including the grandson of Ulysses S. Grant, who helped lay the soldier to rest as an honorary pallbearer.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Number of soldiers (Union and Confederate) who fought in the Civil War
3 million
Year the National Park Service began caring for former battleground sites
1933
Approximate run time (in hours) of Ken Burns’ 1990 documentary “The Civil War”
11
Number of veterans living in the U.S., as of 2022
16.2 million

The ______, the highest U.S. military award, was created during the Civil War.

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The Congressional Medal of Honor, the highest U.S. military award, was created during the Civil War.

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Abraham Lincoln helped turn Robert E. Lee’s home into a cemetery.

Arlington National Cemetery is the final resting place for more than 400,000 soldiers and their family members, but at one time, the Virginia military cemetery was an estate run by Confederate General Robert E. Lee and his wife, Mary. The couple abandoned the property as the war broke out, and shortly afterward the U.S. Army seized the Arlington estate to protect nearby Washington, D.C., which it overlooked. The U.S. government took hold of Arlington after the Lees failed to pay taxes on the land, and turned some portions into a village for formerly enslaved people; the government also soon created plans for a potential military cemetery there. When presented with the idea, Lincoln gave presidential approval for the concept, with the idea that if Lee ever returned, the burial ground would force him to reconsider his role in the war — though Lee never made any effort to reclaim the land. Arlington became a national cemetery in June 1864, and today is the second-largest national cemetery in the U.S.

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.

Interesting Facts

Few flavors complement each other like lemon and lime, with many a refreshing treat combining both for maximum effect. The two citrus fruits have some key differences, however, including the fact that limes sink while lemons float. You may have noticed this if you’ve ever put lime and lemon slices in a glass or pitcher of water, and the reason is simple: Objects float only if they’re less dense than the liquid they're placed in, and while both limes and lemons have densities close to that of water, limes are denser than their yellow counterparts. That remains true whether the lemon or lime in question is whole, peeled, or sliced — a lemon will always float, and a lime will always sink. 

British people are called “limeys” because of scurvy.

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Though pirates and white whales are more evocative, one of the most dangerous aspects of sailing the high seas for centuries was scurvy, a disease caused by vitamin C deficiency. To prevent it, the British navy used to ration lime juice to its brave sailors — hence the nickname.

That's not the only difference between these citrus fruits, of course. Whereas lemons grow well in moderate climates, limes fare better in tropical and subtropical areas. Limes also tend to be smaller, which helps distinguish them from lemons even when they sometimes take on a yellowish hue as they ripen. And though the two are almost identical on a nutritional level, lemons are sweeter — which is probably why you can think of a lot more lemon-flavored candies than lime-flavored ones.

Citrus originated in ______.

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Citrus originated in Southeast Asia.