Original photo by Kasturi Roy/ Unsplash

Ravens are smart — really smart. Studies have shown that they can use tools, remember human faces, and even plan for the future. This behavior cuts both ways for humans: Edgar Allan Poe’s favorite birds have demonstrated a tendency to both favor people who show them kindness and hold grudges against those who treat them poorly. These preferences aren’t fleeting, either — they may last for years.

Ravens (usually) mate for life.

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Like all corvids, ravens are referred to as socially monogamous. This means that mated pairs stick together for life. Other birds that do likewise include the bald eagle, black vulture, and whooping cranes.

Raven intelligence is comparable in some cases to that of chimpanzees, which are among the smartest members of the animal kingdom. What’s more, they aren’t the only ones upending the “bird brain” stereotype. Other members of the corvid family — namely crows, jays, and magpies — have displayed exceptional intelligence as well. So the next time you encounter a raven, be sure you get on its good side. You may make a new friend who won’t forget you anytime soon.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Life expectancy (in years) of a wild raven
10-15
Lines in Poe’s “The Raven”
108
Average wingspan (in inches) of an adult raven
46
Ravens belonging to Odin in Norse mythology
2

A group of ravens is called a(n) ______.

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A group of ravens is called a(n) unkindness.

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The Tower of London has a Ravenmaster.

English lore has long claimed that the kingdom will fall if ravens ever leave the Tower of London. With that in mind, it’s little surprise that the Ravenmaster has been an official — and important — position at the landmark since the 1960s. The current Ravenmaster, Barney Chandler, succeeded Christopher Skaife, who wrote a well-received memoir about his experiences tending to the clever birds, whose small stature belies the near-mythical status they occupy in England’s collective imagination.

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 IhorL/ Shutterstock

What’s the most boring day in history — a day where truly nothing important happened? That was the question posed in 2010 to a computer program named True Knowledge. Designed by computer scientist William Tunstall-Pedoe, the program contained 300 million facts, many of them tied to dates. After scouring those facts and comparing them to their respective dates, True Knowledge decided that April 11, 1954, was the most boring day in the 20th century. Belgium held a general election, some sports events happened, a coup in India was possibly planned but not carried out until two days later, and no notable births or deaths occurred — at least as far as the computer program could figure out. 

April is the wettest month in the U.S. overall.

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Although the phrase “April showers bring May flowers” seems to crown the month as a pretty soggy time of year, data suggests that the actual wettest month is usually June.

However, scientists may have some other days to suggest when it comes to the most boring day in history ever. The period from around 1.8 billion to 800 million years ago is known to geologists as “the Boring Billion,” because very little happened on Earth in terms of evolution, atmospheric chemistry, or geologic formation. Basically, it’s like the Earth was on pause for a billion years. It wasn’t until the Cambrian explosion some 530 million years ago, when most major animal groups started to appear in the fossil record, that things really started to get exciting. So chin up, April 11, 1954: You weren’t very interesting, but there’s at least a billion years that you easily beat. 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Registered voters in the April 11, 1954, Belgian general election
5.8 million
Number of studio albums released by Bob Dylan, who played his first major gig on April 11, 1961
40
Distance (in miles) of the R&D test tunnel dug by the Boring Company in California
1.14
Population of Boring, Oregon, according to the 2020 U.S. Census
1,931

According to a 2022 University of Essex study, the most boring job is ______.

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According to a 2022 University of Essex study, the most boring job is data analysis.

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Boredom may be good for your brain.

Today, boredom is under threat, with billions of smartphones bringing nearly limitless distraction to us worldwide. But while boredom may be uncomfortable, it can also be good for our brains. These precious moments of downtime give our brains a much-needed chance to rest, consolidate memories, and reflect on lessons learned throughout the day. Studies have shown that those who experience boredom spend more time thinking about their future, and boredom is also known to spur creativity as well as altruism. So the next time you’re feeling a mind-numbing sense of restlessness, don’t reach for your phone. Instead just let your mind wander — who knows what you’ll dream up?

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 deimagine/ iStock

Researchers estimate that some 300 million people around the world are colorblind, most of them male. On the opposite end of the spectrum are those with an exceedingly rare genetic condition that allows them to see nearly 100 million colors — or 100 times as many as the rest of us. It’s called tetrachromacy, or “super vision,” and it’s the result of having four types of cone cells in the retina rather than the usual three. (Cones help our eyes detect light and are key to color vision.) Because of the way the condition is passed down via the X chromosome, the mutation occurs exclusively in women.

Dogs see in black and white.

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While humans have three cones to detect light and color, dogs have two. They have trouble seeing red and green, but researchers think they can make out shades of blue and yellow.

One tetrachromat describes her ability this way: “If you and I look at a leaf, I may see magenta running around the outside of the leaf or turquoise in certain parts where you would just see dark green. Where the light is making shadows on the walls, I’m seeing violets and lavenders and turquoise. You’re just seeing gray.” In short, tetrachromats see colors within colors, and even the tiniest change in the color balance of a particular hue will be apparent to them. It's estimated that 12% of women have a fourth retina cone, but only a fraction of them experience tetrachromacy. In total, only about 1% of humans have the condition. The rest of us will just have to close our eyes and imagine what it’s like

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Current number of Crayola colors
148
Americans who wear glasses
166.5 million
Percentage of women whose favorite color is purple
23%
Different colors on the world’s national flags
63

The world’s most common favorite color, according to a global survey, is ______.

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The world’s most common favorite color, according to a global survey, is blue.

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There are three types of heterochromia iridis, or different-colored eyes.

Complete heterochromia is when a person’s irises are each a different color — one blue and one green, for instance. Central heterochromia is when there’s an inner ring of color in the iris that’s different from the outer ring (usually in both eyes); the famous 1985 photo of “Afghan Girl” Sharbat Gula in National Geographic is likely an example. Segmental heterochromia is when a single iris has different colors in different parts, often as a patch or a triangle. Most of the time, heterochromia is a mere genetic quirk that doesn’t affect a person’s vision in the slightest. Some people are born with it, while others develop it later in life.

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 Sarah Ball/ Unsplash

Everyone with a cat knows that felines love running around at night, especially when their so-called owners are trying to sleep. Despite that, cats aren’t actually nocturnal — they’re crepuscular, meaning they’re most active during dusk and dawn. The reason they prefer twilight has to do with their hunting instincts, as their eyes are well attuned to low-light conditions that allow them to see their prey while remaining hidden themselves. And because they’re descended from desert hunters, dusk and dawn are also favorable due to cooler temperatures. This doesn’t stop them from sleeping all day, of course, but they’re always ready to wake up in an instant — an adaptation that helps keep them safe from predators and alert to opportunities for tiny prey.

Cats always land on their feet.

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While it’s true that cats have a righting reflex that allows them to turn in the air and orient themselves so they land on their feet, it doesn’t always work. When it doesn’t, it’s usually because they didn’t fall from a height that was high enough.

Cats are hardly the only crepuscular creatures. Deer, rabbits, bears, skunks, and possums are among the other mammals you can see out and about as the sun is rising or setting. Birds such as barn owls and common nighthawks can also be crepuscular. Animals you might be surprised to learn are mostly nocturnal include koalas, beavers, and scorpions, among others — and some of them exhibit a level of nighttime activity that could even tire out your cat.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Percentage of U.S. households that own a pet
66%
Length (in inches) of Stewie, the longest domestic cat ever
48.5
Academy Award nomination received by the 2016 thriller “Nocturnal Animals”
1
Percentage of cats that are ambidextrous
10%-12%

Animals that are active primarily during the day are ______.

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Animals that are active primarily during the day are diurnal.

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Cats’ eyes have a reflective layer that makes them glow in the dark.

It’s called the tapetum lucidum (Latin for “shining layer”) and it works like a small mirror to reflect light, helping cats see in the murk — another evolutionary adaptation that partially explains why your feline is so wired while you’re snoozing. Cat eyes are special in other ways, too. Their pupils grow up to 50% larger in dim light than ours do, allowing them to see more clearly, and they have more light-sensing rods in the back of their eyes. Dogs, cattle, deer, ferrets, and horses have the tapetum lucidum as well, but their eyes don’t all glow the same color. The hue has to do with the amount of pigment in their retina, as well as other substances in the tapetum, meaning that even two dogs of the same species might have eyes that reflect a different color.

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 © Eva Blanco/iStock

A howling wind can make it seem as though the air itself is roaring across the landscape. But what we hear on a gusty day isn’t the moving air itself — it’s the way that air interacts with the environment. And the different sounds we associate with wind depend on exactly what the air encounters along the way.

Sound is produced when vibrations travel through a medium such as air to reach our ears. Wind, by itself, is simply air that flows from areas of higher pressure to lower pressure. Smooth air moving uniformly doesn’t vibrate in a way that produces sound waves our ears can detect, so in perfectly unobstructed conditions, the wind could move past you without making any audible noise at all.

Chicago is the windiest city in the United States.

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Despite its nickname, Chicago isn’t the country’s windiest city. (In fact, it doesn’t even crack the top 10.) That distinction goes to Cheyenne, Wyoming.

The familiar sounds we associate with wind come from friction. As moving air collides with buildings, rustles leaves, squeezes through cracks, or rushes past uneven surfaces, it creates tiny pressure changes and vibrations. Those disturbances generate sound waves, which is why wind can whistle through a narrow opening or roar through a forest canopy. The faster and more chaotic the airflow becomes, the louder those interactions tend to be.

That’s also why different environments give wind different “voices.” A city full of buildings produces whistles and echoes, forests produce rustling and rushing sounds, and open plains may seem almost silent even when the air is moving quickly.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Speed (in mph) of the fastest recorded non-tornado wind on Earth
253
Year Bette Midler’s “Wind Beneath My Wings” won two Grammy Awards
1990
Categories on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale
5
Tornadoes in the U.S. each year
~1,200

The scientific term for the whistling sound produced when air flows past an object is ______.

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The scientific term for the whistling sound produced when air flows past an object is Aeolian tone.

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The idiom “tilting at windmills” comes from "Don Quixote."

In one memorable episode of the 1604 novel by Spanish author Miguel de Cervantes, the title character mistakes windmills for fearsome giants and charges at them with his lance. Today the phrase “tilting at windmills” means battling imaginary enemies or pursuing an unrealistic goal. The novel also birthed the term “quixotic,” which refers to someone who is foolishly idealistic and impractical.

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 © vulkanismus/stock.adobe.com

You inherit half of your DNA from each parent, 17% to 34% of which comes from each grandparent for an average of 25%, and 12.5% from each great-grandparent. Beyond that, it gets murky — so much so that you aren’t genetically related to all your ancestors. 

The farther up the family tree you go, the more diluted your genetic link becomes; once you get past your great-great-great-grandparents, with whom you share about 3% of your DNA, the more likely it becomes that you aren’t genetically related to your relatives. For example, the percentage drops to a meager 1.56% with your fourth great-grandparents. If you ever see a picture of your great-great-great-great aunt and can’t detect a family resemblance, it may very well be because you didn’t actually inherit any of her DNA.

You inherit more genes from your mother than your father.

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Mitochondrial DNA comes from the egg, not the sperm, resulting in you inheriting slightly more genetic material from your mother than you do from your father.

The chance becomes greater with each generation you go back, of course. It increases from a 17.76% chance of not sharing any DNA with one of your sixth great-grandparents to a 37.43% chance with your seventh great-grandparents and a 57.53% chance with your eighth great-grandparents. The DNA you share with most of your cousins is also fairly meager: an average of 14.4% with first cousins, 3.4% with second cousins, and just 0.8% with third cousins.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Percentage of DNA that doesn’t encode proteins
98%
DNA letters contained in every cell
3 billion
Genes possessed by each individual human
25,000
Year Friedrich Miescher identified DNA
1869

Your mother’s cousin’s child is your ______.

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Your mother’s cousin’s child is your second cousin.

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There are more than four DNA bases.

You may be familiar with the four main DNA bases, but there’s more to our genes than ATGC, aka adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine. (Fun fact: The sci-fi movie Gattaca got its name by artfully combining those four letters.)

At least 17 modified DNA letters (aka bases) have been found to date, including 5-formylcytosine (5fC), which was discovered in 2011. Technically a transitional form of cytosine that was corrected by repair enzymes, 5fC is an intermediate base that was found by researchers from the University of Cambridge to exist in tissue as a stable structure.

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 © mgkuijpers/stock.adobe.com

 In the scorching deserts of North America, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit and rainfall is scarce, a small rodent the size of a hamster is thriving — and it’s possible that it’s never taken a sip of water in its life. The kangaroo rat, named for the powerful hind legs that allow it to bound across the arid desert landscape, has solved one of survival’s trickiest problems: how to live in an environment that provides almost no water at all.

This seemingly miraculous feat is achieved through various evolutional adaptations. One of the kangaroo rat’s key characteristics is its ability to get all the moisture it needs from its primarily seed-based diet. When it breaks down those seeds during digestion, one of the byproducts is a small amount of water — just enough to sustain the animal.  

The world’s largest rodent can weigh as much as an NFL wide receiver.

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The greater capybara, native to Central and South America, weighs between 110 and 132 pounds on average, but one female specimen in Brazil reached a whopping 201 pounds — roughly the weight of the average male wide receiver.

But producing small amounts of metabolic water alone isn’t enough; kangaroo rats have also developed clever adaptations for conserving water. They don’t sweat or pant like other animals, preventing the loss of much-needed liquid from their bodies, and their kidneys concentrate their urine to an almost crystal-like consistency, with very little water lost through waste. Even their exhaled breath is partially recycled thanks to specialized nasal cavities, which condense moisture to be reabsorbed rather than escaping the body through breathing. 

The small, mostly nocturnal rodents also escape much of the daytime heat by remaining in their underground burrows out of the scorching sun. The combination of all these evolutionary and behavioral adaptations allows kangaroo rats — which have a lifespan of between two and six years — to survive in some of Earth’s hottest and harshest environments without drinking a drop of water.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average weight (in grams) of the pygmy jerboa, the world’s smallest rodent
3.75
Rats in New York City
~3 million
Rats specially bred for the filming of “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade”
2,000
The most days a human has survived without food and water
18

The term for an intense fear of mice and rats is ______.

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The term for an intense fear of mice and rats is musophobia.

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Camel humps don’t store water.

This common misconception comes from the camel’s ability to go weeks at a time without needing a drink, which is often mistakenly attributed to their supposedly water-storing humps. But those humps — one or two, depending on the species — store fatty tissue, not water. 

Food sources are often scarce for camels, so to avoid starvation, they’re able to metabolize the fat in their humps for nutrition. When you see a camel with a deflated or drooping hump, it means the animal has gone quite a long time without food — but the hump will sit upright once the camel has refueled. 

Humps aside, camels are excellent at conserving water and surviving in extreme heat. They can lose up to 30% of their body weight due to water loss without suffering fatal consequences — by comparison, other mammals may die at a 12% loss. They also rarely sweat and are capable of drinking huge amounts of water — up to 30 gallons — in one go.

Tony Dunnell
Writer

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

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.