In addition to invading picnics in the park, ants stage full-on conflicts with other ant colonies. Take the aptly named army ants — a term that applies to around 150 distinct species — which are among the many ant species, along with leafcutter ants and marauder ants, that fight each other for the purpose of territory or resource control. Research has shown those battles share striking similarities to human skirmishes, with ants relying on a combination of force, strategy, and chemical warfare to achieve victory.
Army ants have been observed advancing in tight phalanx formations that overwhelm opposing colonies with their sheer size. Some colonies send smaller numbers of scouts beforehand in search of food; those scouts then return to assemble a fighting force. Some species, such as the Matabele ant, even have some ants who essentially act like wartime medics, carrying injured ants away from the fight and tending to their wounds.
Female ants capable of reproduction, aka queen ants, are capable of living up to 30 years. This is as much as 500 times longer than the lifespan of male ants and roughly 10 times longer than that of nonreproductive female worker ants.
There’s also evidence of ants strategically deploying “weaponry” in battles with other ant colonies. For example, the Raspberry crazy ant secretes a substance that neutralizes fire ant venom, while door ants explode when threatened and spew toxins on enemies.
Other species, such as leafcutter ants, craft armor from magnesium calcite that helps them withstand oncoming attacks. Many ants also instinctively know when it’s time to retreat and fight another day, displaying an unwillingness to fight to the death in a losing situation — unless it’s for the purpose of defending their nest.
The oldest ant fossil, discovered in Brazil, is 13 million years old.
Advertisement
A bullet ant’s sting is ranked among the most painful in the world.
The Schmidt sting pain index, created by entomologist Justin O. Schmidt, is a ranking of the most excruciatingly painful insect stings. Pain level one includes the sting of red, tropical, and southern fire ants, which Schmidt equated to being shocked by a light switch, as well as the sting of a bee. At the highest end of the spectrum is the bullet ant, which is the only ranked insect to hold a notorious four-plus pain rating.
Schmidt described the sting in his 2016 book The Sting of the Wild as “like walking over flaming charcoal with a 3-inch nail embedded in your heel.” Unlike other ant venom, which is commonly delivered by bite, a bullet ant delivers its venom using a wasplike stinger. While the sting isn’t fatal, it can lead to intense pain, muscle paralysis, and hallucinations that can last for up to 24 hours.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
There are more than a million known asteroids in our humble solar system, most of which are fairly small and irregularly shaped. There are some outliers, however. Some asteroids are nearly spherical, and some are so big they have their own moons — around 150 of them are in this category, in fact. There are even binary and trinary asteroids that orbit one another like celestial twins and triplets, which surely makes hurtling through the vacuum of space less lonely than it would be otherwise. (In February 2022, astronomers even discovered a quaternary asteroid — 130 Elektra, which has three moons.) Like their moonless counterparts, the majority of these asteroids can be found in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and are believed to be remnants from the creation of the solar system.
Spare a thought for Mercury and Venus, which have a grand total of zero moons between them. Astronomers believe this is because they’re so close to the sun, which would likely capture any natural satellites orbiting them.
The first asteroid moon discovered was Dactyl, a mile-wide natural satellite orbiting the asteroid Ida and initially spotted in 1994. Other asteroids with moons include 45 Eugenia, 3122 Florence (which has two moons), and 87 Sylvia, which is roughly the same size as West Virginia and was the first trinary asteroid discovered. It’s also among the largest known asteroids in our solar system. As for the largest asteroid to ever hit Earth, it wasn’t the one that killed the dinosaurs (RIP). That distinction may belong to the asteroid that caused the Vredefort crater in South Africa, which once may have been around twice as large as it is now. A recent study concluded that the asteroid that made the crater may have been between 12.4 and 15.5 miles across when it made impact some 2 billion years ago. Hopefully, we won’t see one like it again any time soon.
“Asteroid” comes from a Greek word meaning “starlike.”
Advertisement
The first asteroid ever discovered is now considered a dwarf planet.
If you find Pluto’s unjust trajectory from planet to dwarf planet hard to follow, wait until you hear about Ceres. Discovered on New Year’s Day 1801 by Guiseppe Piazzi at Sicily’s Palermo Astronomical Observatory, it was originally considered a planet before being reclassified as an asteroid in the 1850s — the first time we mere mortals realized that asteroids were a distinct class. Other early asteroids include Pallas (1802), Juno (1804), and Vesta (1807), all of which are smaller than Ceres — which is why the latter was reclassified again, this time as a dwarf planet, in 2006. In addition to Pluto and Ceres, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) recognizes three other dwarf planets: Eris, Makemake, and Haumea.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
Original photo by Peter Hermes Furian/ Alamy Stock Photo
“West Virginia” is a bit of a misnomer, as the bordering state of Virginia actually extends farther west than its neighbor. West Virginia’s westernmost point is located just north of the town of Fort Gay along the Big Sandy River in Wayne County. You’d need to travel another 55 to 60 miles west before reaching the western edge of Virginia, which is located in Cumberland Gap National Historical Park along a three-way border shared by Kentucky and Tennessee.
The origins of this oddity can be traced to the 1820s, when the land that is now modern-day West Virginia was still part of Virginia. At the time, many western Virginian communities (i.e., those west of the Great Appalachian Valley) felt underrepresented in the state legislature, which operated out of Richmond on the east side of the state. This disconnect came to a head when Virginia seceded from the Union in 1861 at the start of the Civil War — a choice many in the future state of West Virginia disagreed with — thus causing 39 western counties to secede from Old Dominion and form a new state.
Virginia is home to the world’s largest office building.
The Pentagon, in the city of Arlington, was the world’s largest office building from 1943 to 2023, at 6.67 million square feet. But it was overtaken by the Surat Diamond Bourse (7.1 million square feet) in Surat, India. The Pentagon remains the largest office building in the United States.
The original proposed name was “the State of Kanawha” after a prominent river in the region. But many locals still held the name “Virginia” in high regard, so lawmakers voted in favor of “West Virginia” instead — though the name more aptly reflects cultural differences than it does precise geography. On April 20, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed West Virginia would become the 35th U.S. state, and it formally achieved statehood on June 20 of that same year.
Virginia was named after Queen Elizabeth I, known as the “Virgin Queen.”
Advertisement
The same person served as both the youngest and oldest governor of West Virginia.
Cecil Underwood was elected to his first term as governor of West Virginia in 1956. He took office the following year at age 34, making him the youngest person to hold the Mountain State’s highest office. At the time, West Virginia’s constitution prohibited governors from serving consecutive terms (it was later amended in 1970 to permit it), so Underwood was forced to leave the governorship in 1961 after a single four-year term.
Underwood ran again in both the 1964 and 1976 West Virginia gubernatorial elections, though he was defeated each time. But his luck changed in 1996, when he was reelected to the office after more than three decades. He reclaimed the governorship on January 13, 1997, at the age of 74, becoming the oldest governor in the state’s history.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
Some researchers have seemingly turned back time 2,000 years just by planting ancient seeds. Amazingly, a Judean date palm seed that was unearthed at a dig site in eastern Israel in the 1960s is today a thriving tree called Methuselah, named for the long-lived biblical patriarch.
Many plants rely on the wind or animals to help disperse their seeds, but not all. Chinese witch hazel plants can launch their seeds nearly 60 feet. Scientists believe the plant evolved its propelling abilities to successfully spread without overcrowding its environment.
Archaeologists working at the ancient fort of Masada unearthed a handful of date palm seeds, using two for radiocarbon dating to confirm their age. The remaining excavated seeds sat in storage until 2005, when researchers at Israel’s Arava Institute took a chance on planting three of them. Only one of the seeds germinated, springing to life as the sole living example of its species, which likely went extinct around 500 CE. The experiment encouraged scientists to attempt more ancient plantings with date palm seeds found at other dig sites, and today the ancient-yet-young Methuselah has at least six companions that are as old as the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Methuselah has since grown into a healthy tree, making pollen that has successfully fertilized modern date trees and produced fruit. However, it’s not the oldest surviving seed to get a second chance. In 2012, Russian scientists unearthed 32,000-year-old seeds from Siberian permafrost. After extracting frozen plant tissue from the delicate seeds, researchers were able to successfully germinate and grow a relative of the modern-day S. stenophylla, aka the narrow-leafed campion — an achievement that could point the way to reviving other plants frozen in time.
The world’s largest seed bank, located in England, stores more than 2.4 billion seeds.
Advertisement
The world’s largest seed weighs as much as three bowling balls.
Seeds come in all shapes and sizes, though one tree’s offspring tends to tip the scales. Coco de mer palm trees produce seeds that can surpass more than a foot in length and weigh up to 55 pounds. The gargantuan trees are incredibly rare and considered endangered; they’re native to just two of the Seychelles’ 115 islands, and experts believe there are only about 8,000 mature coco de mer trees left. The palms are slow growers, taking up to 50 years before they’re able to reproduce — and when they do, their fruit ripens gradually over the course of 10 years. Scientists aren’t exactly sure why the coco de mer produces such sizable seeds, though some believe it could be to accommodate a generous amount of nutrients — enough to help the slow-growing seedlings in their quest to reach the forest canopy.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
No animal on Earth travels quite like the eastern monarch butterfly. Its journey begins in the early days of spring on a few mountains in central Mexico. Millions of the monarchs (Danaus plexippus plexippus) fill the branches of oyamel firs, and as the temperature warms up, they soak in the sun and begin their epic journey northward — a 3,000-mile trip that looks more like a bird’s migration than an insect’s.
The monarch butterfly is named after an actual monarch.
When English colonists arrived in the Americas, they were enamored with its brightly colored orange butterflies. Legend has it that they named the creatures for Prince William of Orange (1650-1702), also known as King William III.
But it’s not only the miles that make the butterfly’s journey so remarkable — it’s also the means. A typical monarch butterfly lives for only about four weeks, not nearly long enough to complete the journey to the northern U.S. and Canada. So the migration becomes a multigenerational one. In a typical year, it will take four generations for monarch butterflies to finish the seasonal quest their great-grandparents started. To return south in the fall, a “super generation” — also known as the Methuselah generation (after the long-lived biblical patriarch) because it can live eight times longer than its ancestors — will travel 50 miles a day by riding thermal currents southward before finally resting in the same oyamel firs in central Mexico. All hail the monarch!
Monarch caterpillars survive thanks to a genus of plant called milkweed (Asclepias), which provides both food and habitat.
Advertisement
Mexican scientists are trying to move a forest to save the monarch butterfly.
Despite the monarch butterfly’s amazing resiliency, life isn’t easy for the 4-inch fluttering creature. Over the past 20 years, the number of eastern monarchs spending the winter in central Mexico has declined 80%, due to habitat loss, pesticides, and climate change. To combat this decline, researchers are planting saplings of the oyamel fir — the tree preferred by the butterflies while overwintering — some 1,300 feet higher than the current range in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve in Michoacán, Mexico. The process is known as “assisted migration” or “assisted colonization,” and the hope is that cooler temperatures at higher elevations will help the trees survive a warming climate and secure a safe place for monarchs to hibernate and prosper.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
No two planets are the same — even when it comes to their sunsets. As the sun dips below the horizon on Earth, the sky blossoms into warm hues of oranges, pinks, and reds. But that’s not the case everywhere in the galaxy. Sunsets, of course, have to do with the properties of the visible light spectrum, in which light takes on a variety of colors. Our sky appears blue, for example, because when light reaches the Earth’s atmosphere, gases (oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen) and molecules scatter the shortest wavelengths of light (violet and blue) the most. When the sun sets, it’s lower in the sky, and light travels farther through a denser atmosphere. As more of the light is scattered, the short blue wavelengths disperse, and more of the longer red and yellow wavelengths actually reach our eyes.
Ash from volcanic eruptions dulls sunsets on Earth.
Volcanoes inject sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere when they erupt. Because these aerosols introduce more obstacles in the atmosphere, only light at the far (i.e., red) end of the visible spectrum can make the journey, which in turn creates dazzling sunsets.
Although Mars is our planetary neighbor, its skies are almost completely the opposite. During the day, the skies above the red planet are, well, red, but at the end of a Martian day, a blue haze forms. Although the same physics are at work, the planets’ different atmospheres produce contrasting results. Mars’ atmosphere (or lack thereof) is mostly carbon dioxide and iron-rich dust. It’s this dust, made of larger particles than in Earth’s atmosphere, that scatters the light in different ways than on Earth, creating red skies during the day. When the sun sets, the Martian dust preserves more of the short blue wavelengths. In 2020, NASA applied this gaseous light physics to create a “sunset simulator” that shows off the end-of-day light displays on other planets, moons, and exoplanets — proving that the galaxy is indeed a kaleidoscope of color.
In the Northern Hemisphere, sunsets are more vivid during the winter season.
Advertisement
One day a ring may encircle Mars.
According to modeling produced by scientists at Purdue University in 2017, in 70 million years the Martian moon Phobos will reach the planet’s Roche limit, the point where objects are torn apart by tidal forces. Once this happens, a ring of debris will surround Mars, somewhat similar to the ring around Saturn (though to a less extraordinary degree). This theory also suggests that this won’t be the first time Mars has had rings. Over the past 4.3 billion years, Mars has likely gone through cycles of rings and moons. In the far future, Mars’ rings will once again coalesce and become a new moon, some five times smaller than Phobos.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
There’s more than one way to predict the weather. Anyone wary of their local news forecast can try something much simpler if they’d like to know whether or not it’s about to rain: Simply take a peek at some pine cones, which close in response to moisture in the air.
They do this for the same reason they do everything else: to disperse their seeds as widely and effectively as possible, as pine cones are a means of reproduction for some trees. There are both male and female cones, and most of the ones we see are the latter — they produce seeds, whereas males produce the pollen that fertilizes female cones. Dry conditions are more conducive to speed dispersal, while dampness, well, dampens.
Most coniferous trees produce cones, including firs, cypresses, and cedars.
Pine cone scales have several layers. If water drops make contact with the upper layer when the cone is open, the water then slides into the inner layer and causes it to expand. Once the scales begin to bend upward, they eventually curl shut. Then when the air becomes drier and the water inside the cone evaporates, the scales open up again. Pine cone seeds are designed to travel on the wind and can reach a distance of several hundred feet from their parent tree when conditions are ideal — which is to say, dry.
The name of the protuberance at the end of a pine cone is umbo.
Advertisement
The location of the oldest tree in the world is kept secret.
There’s a good reason the oldest tree in the world is named Methuselah. The 4,857-year-old Great Basin bristlecone pine was named after a biblical figure who was said to have reached the age of 969, which would make him the oldest human who ever lived.
There’s also a good reason the tree’s exact location isn’t public information: The U.S. Forest Service wants to protect it from vandalism or worse. Located nearly 9,800 feet above sea level in the White Mountains of Inyo County, California, Methusaleh is believed to be the oldest living non-clonal organism on the planet. Inyo County doesn’t receive much precipitation, but when it does, you can be sure that Methusaleh’s pine cones close to keep dry.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
In the second half of the 19th century, Chicago was one of the fastest-growing cities in the world. In 1870, it was home to 299,000 people, and by the century’s end, 1.7 million. But along with that population boom came unfortunate side effects, including waterborne diseases such as cholera and typhoid. The problem was in large part that the city’s sewage flowed into the Chicago River, which in turn emptied into Lake Michigan — the source of the city’s drinking water. So Chicago turned to engineer Ellis S. Chesbrough, designer of the city’s sewer system, to solve the problem once and for all.
Chicago is nicknamed the “Windy City” in part thanks to the winds blowing off Lake Michigan, but the actual windiest place in the U.S. is Cold Bay, Alaska, with its average wind speed of 16.1 miles per hour.
Initially, Chesbrough designed a 2-mile-long tunnel 60 feet below the bottom of Lake Michigan to draw less-polluted water from farther offshore. Unfortunately, all it took was a heavy rain for this far-flung water source to also become polluted, so Chesbrough eyed another solution. If the city’s eponymous river could just flow away from Lake Michigan and empty into the waterways leading to the Mississippi, Chicago’s water problem would be solved. The subcontinental divide just west of Chicago is what caused the river to flow toward the lake, so if the city dug a ditch lower than both the lake and the river through the divide, gravity would take it from there.
Workers began the laborious process of reversing the Chicago River in 1892. After eight years of digging (and under cover of night due to mounting lawsuits from cities downstream), Chicago blew up the last dam on January 2, 1900. Chesbrough never saw the incredible feat of human engineering — he died in 1886 — but his ambitious plan saved the city, securing its prosperous future into the 20th century and beyond.
At more than 1,100 miles, the Grand Canal of China is the longest human-made waterway in the world.
Advertisement
Chicago is named after garlic (and a striped skunk).
Although things like “thunder” have been suggested as the origin of the name “Chicago,” the roots of the word are much different. According to Illinois historians, “Chicago” derives from the French transliteration of the Miami-Illinois word “šikaakwa,” used to describe a foul-smelling striped skunk as well as the similarly smelly garlic or leek (Allium tricoccum) found throughout the region. In 1687, when French fur trader and explorer Robert de La Salle passed through the area, he wrote in his journal, “We arrived at the said place called ‘Chicagou’ which, according to what we were able to learn of it, has taken this name because of the quantity of garlic which grows in the forests in this region.”
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
If you feel uneasy every time there’s a Friday the 13th on the horizon, we have some bad news: The 13th day of the month lands slightly more frequently on a Friday than any other day of the week, making the supposedly unlucky date fairly common.
The reason for this comparatively high frequency has to do with the Gregorian calendar, which is based on a repeating 400-year cycle and leap years that add to the total number of days in that cycle. Including leap days, each four-century cycle consists of 146,097 days, which is divisible by seven with no remainder, equaling 20,871. For example, January 1, 2000, fell on a Saturday, meaning January 1, 2400, will too. Knowing this allows us to determine in advance which day(s) of the week the 13th will fall on in any given month or year.
There’s always at least one Friday the 13th in a calendar year.
Due to the reliable patterns that determine how days are distributed in the Gregorian calendar, every calendar year is guaranteed to have at least one Friday the 13th and as many as three.
The difference in frequency is minimal, however: The 13th will fall on a Friday 688 times during the cycle that began on January 1, 2000, compared to 687 Wednesdays and Sundays, 685 Mondays and Tuesdays, and 684 Thursdays and Saturdays. The years 2012 and 2015 both had three Friday the 13ths, as will 2026 — February, March, and November will all feature horror fans’ favorite (un)lucky day. By the end of the decade, the 2020s as a whole will have had a total of 16 Friday the 13ths.
The official term for the fear of Friday the 13th is “paraskevidekatriaphobia.”
Advertisement
Spoiler alert: Jason isn’t the antagonist of the first “Friday the 13th” movie.
As Drew Barrymore found out the hard way in Scream’s legendary opening sequence, the villain of the original Friday the 13th isn’t Jason Voorhees — it’s his mother Pamela, who spends the movie picking off teens at Camp Crystal Lake to avenge her son, who drowned there as a child when the counselors were, shall we say, otherwise occupied when they should have been on lifeguard duty.
Jason doesn’t emerge as the primary antagonist until 1981’s Friday the 13th Part II, and he doesn’t don his iconic hockey mask until 1982’s Part III. He’s been getting killed by final girls at the end of one movie and coming back to life at the beginning of the next ever since.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
Tonic water is best known for adding a little bite to cocktails, though it has a hidden talent: It glows when exposed to ultraviolet light. While modern tonic waters often include citrus flavors or sweeteners to ease their bitter taste, the mix is traditionally crafted from just two ingredients — carbonated water and quinine, the second of which is capable of illumination. Quinine’s ability to glow, technically called fluorescence, occurs only when the substance is exposed to the right conditions, particularly when its molecules absorb invisible ultraviolet light (such as that projected by a black light). The excited molecules then quickly release that energy, which appears as a blue hue to the human eye in a darkened room.
People in hot or tropical climates have the greatest risk of malaria infection, but mosquitoes that carry the disease can also survive in cooler climates. In the 1940s, the CDC began mosquito spraying to reduce U.S. malaria cases, and mostly eradicated the illness here by 1951.
Though tonic water is now a bar cart staple, its initial purpose wasn’t enjoyment — it was to prevent and treat malaria. Quinine, which comes from the bark of the South American cinchona tree, was first used by the Indigenous Quechua people as a cure-all for stomach ailments; by the 1600s, Europeans had documented its fever-reducing properties. In the 1700s, Scottish doctor George Cleghorn discovered it could also effectively treat malaria. As the only known treatment for nearly 300 years, quinine was paired with water to create a “tonic” and distributed to British soldiers stationed in India and other malaria-prone regions. Some historians believe soldiers began adding the medication to gin and other alcohols to make the bitter flavor more palatable, eventually creating the “gin and tonic” drink we know today. However, other researchers suggest it wasn’t until the 1860s that the classic drink emerged, served to victorious patrons at horse racing tracks in India.
The wombat, a small Australian marsupial, glows under ultraviolet light.
Advertisement
The search for a quinine alternative created the first synthetic dye.
Quinine’s legacy isn’t just in the beverages we drink, but also in the clothes we wear. The medicine led one scientist to discover mauveine, a synthetic dye that lends its name to the shade of purple we call mauve. In the 19th century, getting ahold of quinine was costly, since the compound was created from cinchona tree bark imported from South America. Some researchers, like chemist William Perkin, attempted to create bark-free synthetic versions. One of Perkin’s attempts, using a chemical called aniline, resulted in a goopy dark substance that didn’t easily wash away. Realizing its staining abilities, Perkin patented the substance as the world’s first synthetic dye — easier to use than natural dyes, and with the benefit of being more colorfast. Shortly after his discovery, Perkin opened his own textile dyeing factory, helping to launch a fashion craze that featured his newly created hue. Even Queen Victoria got in on the act, wearing a mauve-colored dress at the International Exhibition of 1862.
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.
Advertisement
top picks from the Inbox Studio network
Interesting Facts is part of Inbox Studio, which publishes content that uplifts, informs, and inspires.
Enter your email to receive facts so astonishing you’ll have a hard time believing they’re true. They are. Each email is packed with fascinating information that will prove it.
Sorry, your email address is not valid. Please try again.
Sorry, your email address is not valid. Please try again.