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Did you know that hidden within your inner ear are microscopic crystals called otoconia? These tiny grains of calcium carbonate help your brain sense gravity and linear movement. 

The crystals rest on a gelatinous membrane above sensory hair cells inside two small chambers called the utricle and saccule. When you tilt your head or move forward, backward, or sideways, the otoconia shift slightly, moving the membrane and bending the hair cells beneath them. That movement sends signals to your brain about your body’s orientation relative to gravity, helping you stay balanced and aware of your position in space.

That process is just one component of your balance system, which also relies on the semicircular canals (SCC) to detect rotation, the eyes to track visual movement, and sensory feedback from the muscles and joints. But without otoconia, your sense of “up” and “down” would blur, and even small motions could leave you disoriented.

There are two types of vertigo.

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Peripheral vertigo originates in the inner ear or the vestibular nerve and can be caused by dislodged otoconia, Ménière’s disease, or vestibular neuritis (an inner ear infection). Central vertigo is caused by a problem in the brain, such as a stroke, tumor, or other neurological disorder.

With age — or occasionally after a head injury — some otoconia can become dislodged and move into the nearby canals. Once there, they disrupt normal fluid movement, sending conflicting signals to the brain and causing sudden spinning sensations known as benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). Though the dizziness can be startling, BPPV is common and treatable. A series of gentle head and body movements can use gravity to guide the stray crystals back to their proper chamber, often relieving symptoms within minutes.

So yes, you really do have tiny “ear rocks” — and though they’re microscopic, they play a surprisingly large role in keeping your world steady. 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average size (in micrometers) of an otoconium
10
Estimated age (in years) of the oldest known crystal on Earth
4.4 billion
Year a Harvard researcher theorized BPPV may be caused by detached otoconia
1962
Semicircular canals in each ear that help detect rotation
3

The painter ______ wrote that he had frequent “dizzy spells,” which researchers speculate were bouts of vertigo.

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The painter Vincent Van Gogh wrote that he had frequent “dizzy spells,” which researchers speculate were bouts of vertigo.

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Astronauts often have trouble with balance and coordination when they return to Earth.

After months in weightlessness, the body’s vestibular system — including the otoconia — is no longer calibrated to the pull of Earth’s gravity. In space, those crystals don’t settle downward the way they do on Earth, so they send mixed signals to the brain about which way is up. When astronauts reenter Earth’s gravitational environment, they may feel dizzy, off-balance, or unsteady while their brains and vestibular systems readjust.

To help reduce those effects, NASA uses simulations that create brief moments of weightlessness to challenge the inner ear. That training helps astronauts’ brains adjust more quickly once they return to Earth. Even with such preparation, though, it can take days or weeks for the otoconia to “relearn” how to respond to gravity and for the brain to interpret those signals correctly again.

Kristina Wright
Writer

Kristina is a coffee-fueled writer living happily ever after with her family in the suburbs of Richmond, Virginia.

Original photo by Paul Marriott/ Alamy Stock Photo

Queen Elizabeth II was known for being on her feet for hours at royal events, and for walking at a pace that could tire out even trained bodyguards. With all that standing, it made sense that she had a little help making sure that her shoes were comfortable. In 2012, The Sunday Times reported that someone on the queen’s staff helped break in new pairs of the queen’s favorite shoes — usually Anello & Davide loafers — before the queen wore them herself. Then, in 2019, the queen’s aide and senior dresser, Angela Kelly, revealed that she was the “flunky” tasked with the job. During the break-in period, Kelly was required to wear beige cotton ankle socks and walk only on carpeted floors. 

The average British adult will take enough steps in a lifetime to walk around the world three times.

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A 2020 study found that the average British adult walks about 74,462 miles in a lifetime. A trip around the globe is just under 25,000 miles, meaning the average Briton will walk enough to circumnavigate the planet three times. (The average American’s step count is similar.)

While having someone to break in your shoes may seem like the height of opulence, there was arguably a good reason for it. In 2017, the queen’s wardrobe designer, Stewart Parvin, defended the practice by explaining, “The queen can never say ‘I’m uncomfortable, I can’t walk anymore.’” (To do so would be a major royal faux pas, not to mention a disappointment to waiting visitors.) The queen’s shoe care also extended beyond just one Buckingham Palace staffer with a similarly sized foot: Her highness had a team tasked with taking care of the royal footwear by airing out shoes, polishing them, and then storing them in silk drawstring bags. Talk about service truly fit for a queen.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Price of the world’s most expensive shoe, made with 30 carats of diamonds and a piece of meteorite
$19.9 million
Height (in inches) of the heel on the queen’s Anello & Davide loafers
2.25
Year Air Jordan sneakers were first released to the public
1985
People who worked for the queen
1,133

The world’s oldest leather shoe, dated around 3500 BCE, was found in a cave in ______.

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The world’s oldest leather shoe, dated around 3500 BCE, was found in a cave in Armenia.

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Queen Elizabeth I decreed strict laws about clothing.

Today, many of us live in a largely “wear what you want” culture, but Elizabethan England played by some vastly different rules. During Elizabeth I’s reign from 1558 to 1603, the queen issued eight separate proclamations concerned with the “excesse of apparel,” part of a category of regulation known as sumptuary laws. Among other things, the proclamations banned anyone but relatives of the royal family from wearing purple — a color long associated with royalty — and from buying extravagant foreign garments. Elizabeth feared that excessive spending on clothing would bankrupt the realm and lead to “the wasting and undoing of a great number of young gentlemen.” Those found in violation of the rules were usually fined. The laws were a reaction, in part, to the rise of wealthy merchants who were now capable of purchasing garments that had once been reserved for nobility. Although Elizabeth I’s laws may seem harsh, they’re only a part of a long history of sumptuary laws, which can also be found in ancient Sparta, the Roman republic, and feudal Japan.

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 Image Source/ iStock

It’s easy to bungle or forget the lyrics to “The Star-Spangled Banner.” But it may shock you to learn that most people only know a quarter of the song to begin with. The U.S. national anthem actually contains four stanzas, the last three of which are almost always omitted in live performances for brevity’s sake. Despite one verse being favored, however, all four are part of Francis Scott Key’s original 1814 poem that the national anthem is based on.

Key wrote the poem soon after the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812, during which British forces bombarded Maryland’s Fort McHenry for 25 hours. As the smoke cleared in the wake of the battle, Key saw the American flag still flying over the fort, signifying a U.S. victory.

The Spanish national anthem has no lyrics.

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“La Marcha Real” has served as the official national anthem of Spain since 1770. Despite several failed attempts to add lyrics, the song remains lyricless today. Spain is one of four countries whose official anthems lack words, along with Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, and San Marino.

The familiar first verse begins with “O say can you see” and ends with the question, “O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave / O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?” It refers to “bombs bursting in air,” while the second verse discusses the “dread silence” after battle. The second verse also celebrates the flag still flying as a symbol of a U.S. victory after the fighting. 

In Key’s original manuscript, he swapped out the question mark in the first verse with an exclamation point in the second, thus ending with a definitive and joyous declaration: “‘Tis the star-spangled banner, O long may it wave / O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!”  With two additional verses, the song ultimately totals 32 lines and 32 bars of music. If you were to perform it in its entirety, the anthem would take around six minutes or sometimes far more to sing — a long time to be on your feet at the start of a game.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year “The Star-Spangled Banner” was adopted as the U.S. national anthem
1931
Bars of music in the world’s longest official national anthem (Uruguay)
105
Peak Billboard Hot 100 position for Whitney Houston’s national anthem performance
6
Stripes on the 1814 American flag that inspired “The Star-Spangled Banner”
15

Francis Scott Key was a ______ by trade.

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Francis Scott Key was a lawyer by trade.

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Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote a fifth verse for “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Nearly 50 years after Francis Scott Key wrote “The Star-Spangled Banner,” the esteemed American poet Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. penned an unofficial fifth verse. Holmes wrote the verse in 1861 at the start of the U.S. Civil War, advocating for freeing enslaved people in the name of liberty.

Holmes wrote about “a foe from within” — a stark contrast from Key’s original poem about the British invading America. Holmes’ fifth verse also speaks of “the millions unchain’d who our birthright have gained,” and how their freedom is essential for keeping the flag’s “bright blazon forever unstained!”

Bennett Kleinman
Staff Writer

Bennett Kleinman is a New York City-based staff writer for Inbox Studio, and previously contributed to television programs such as "Late Show With David Letterman" and "Impractical Jokers." Bennett is also a devoted New York Yankees and New Jersey Devils fan, and thinks plain seltzer is the best drink ever invented.

Original photo by Raul Baena/ Shutterstock

It is sometimes said that there are two types of tickling: knismesis and gargalesis. The former is the “light, featherlike” kind, which doesn’t induce laughter, while the latter is more high-pressure and does cause laughter. And while you may think of humans as the only creatures susceptible to gargalesis, one of our much smaller counterparts is as well: the humble rat. Rats actually love being tickled, especially on their back and belly, and there’s even a specific term for the frolicking they do in between tickles: freudensprünge, or “joy jumps.” Sadly, rat giggles are too high for us to hear without special microphones that can reproduce the sound in a lower register. (That doesn’t make videos of rats being tickled any less adorable, however.)

You can tickle yourself.

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Because your brain knows that you’re using your own fingers to do it, it’s impossible to be surprised by a self-tickle. The mind “dials down the sensory response” in such situations, and much of the joy (or displeasure!) of being tickled apparently comes from the lack of control.

All of the great apes (gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans) let out a “remarkably humanlike laugh” when tickled, while animals ranging from dogs to penguins appear to enjoy it as well. That said, many humans do not — some find the sensation deeply uncomfortable, and laugh out of discomfort rather than joy. One study in which participants rated how much they like being tickled on a 10-point scale (from very unpleasant to very pleasant) produced an average of only 5. Perhaps surprisingly, people rated tickling others at only 5.9.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Estimated number of rats in New York City
2 million
Most recent Year of the Rat in the Chinese zodiac
2020
Continent without rats (Antarctica)
1
Views of the original Pizza Rat video on YouTube
12 million

Male rats are referred to as ______.

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Male rats are referred to as bucks.

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Some scientists believe that gerbils, not rats, caused the bubonic plague.

From being associated with snitches to the misconception that they’re dirty, rats don’t enjoy the best of reputations. And while it’s true that they can serve as vectors of disease, some scientists think that rats weren’t actually responsible for the plague that ravaged Europe during the Middle Ages — gerbils were. The theory suggests that fleas carrying Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes the plague, jumped from dead gerbils (RIP) in Central Asia to pack animals and then to humans, who then brought it to Europe. Domestic gerbils found at pet stores today aren’t at risk, luckily, and neither is anyone fortunate enough to bring one home.

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 Orietta Gaspari/ iStock

While Ireland is named after the mythical goddess Éiru, there’s only one sovereign nation in the world named for a real-life woman. That distinction lies with St. Lucia, a Caribbean island nation christened in honor of St. Lucy of Syracuse, patron saint of the blind, who died around the fourth century CE.

Mexico’s official name contains the words “United States.”

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Mexico's official name is actually the United Mexican States. The name was established upon ratifying the nation's first constitution on October 4, 1824. Repeated attempts have been made to shorten the official label to just “Mexico,” but none has yet been successful.

St. Lucia was initially called Louanalao (meaning “Island of the Iguanas”) by the Indigenous Arawak people as early as 200 CE. It was in 1502 that the origins of its current name formed, when shipwrecked French sailors dubbed the place “Sainte Alousie.” It was a common practice at the time to name islands after saints, and legend has it that the sailors reached the island on December 13 — St. Lucy’s feast day. Given the date’s significance, December 13 is now celebrated in the country as the National Day of St. Lucia. The Spanish who arrived around 1511 named the island “Sancta Lucia”; the current name formed after waves of colonization by the English and French.

While female namesakes are rare on a national level, one woman has lent her name to dozens of smaller locations. The name of Queen Victoria, the U.K.’s reigning monarch from 1837 to 1901, appears in the titles of locations around the globe, such as the provincial capital of British Columbia, Canada, and Zimbabwe’s breathtaking Victoria Falls. You'd be hard-pressed to find an American woman with influence so vast. Even in the U.S., only a handful of places are named for women, including Barton County, Kansas — named after Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross — and Dare County, North Carolina, honoring Virginia Dare, the first child of English parents to be born in the New World.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year the name “America” first appeared on maps (in honor of Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci)
1507
Saints recognized by the Roman Catholic Church
10,000+
Member states of the United Nations
193
Countries whose English names begin with the letter “S”
26

The capital of Liberia is named after U.S. President ______.

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The capital of Liberia is named after U.S. President James Monroe.

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Two countries have no official capital city.

Switzerland and Nauru may not appear to have much in common, but both countries share a quirk — neither has an official capital city. While Bern is considered the de facto capital of Switzerland (it’s where the Swiss parliament, also known as the Federal Assembly, meets), there’s no established capital written into the country’s laws. As for the Pacific island of Nauru, not only is there no capital, but there are no real cities of any kind, since the island is instead made up of several districts. Of those districts, Yaren is considered the de facto capital — it houses important government buildings, such as Parliament House, as well as several embassies. On the flip side, South Africa has three official capitals, the most of any country. There you can find the city of Pretoria serving as the administrative capital, Cape Town as the legislative capital, and Bloemfontein as the judicial capital.

Bennett Kleinman
Staff Writer

Bennett Kleinman is a New York City-based staff writer for Inbox Studio, and previously contributed to television programs such as "Late Show With David Letterman" and "Impractical Jokers." Bennett is also a devoted New York Yankees and New Jersey Devils fan, and thinks plain seltzer is the best drink ever invented.

Original photo by hadynyah/ iStock

Most rock formations found in nature are revered for their stoic appearance — think snow-capped mountains or monoliths like the Rock of Gibraltar. But some more active landscapes, like ever-shifting sand dunes, have a livelier presence: They can “sing.” An estimated 35 sand dunes around the world, including some in the United Arab Emirates, Chile, and the U.S., are known to produce eerie, vibrational hums in a variety of tones. Some even produce booms or croaking sounds. Marco Polo noted the phenomenon during his travels, and many communities surrounding dunes have developed their own superstitions about the songs. Yet for centuries, no one really understood why or how these sounds happened. 

NASA tests its space rovers on sand dunes.

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Mars has more than 4,000 sand dune fields, so navigating the rugged off-Earth territory takes some preparation. That’s why NASA has tested two Viking spacecraft at Colorado’s Great Sand Dunes National Park, where the robots experience extreme terrain and high temps.

Today, scientists believe sand dunes produce their songs in part because of avalanches. By nature, sand dunes shift as wind whips sand into new locations, and it’s likely the humming sound occurs when air pushes through millions of sand grains as they tumble into new positions. Even then, it takes a combination of weather conditions to create the silty harmonies; generally, sand must be extremely dry to emit sound.

Some of the world’s loudest sand dunes are found in China in the Badain Jaran Desert, reaching more than 1,600 feet tall and emitting sounds that peak at 105 decibels — the same volume as a music concert. In North America, the largest sand dunes are all found within Great Sand Dunes National Park in southern Colorado, reaching 741 feet at the base of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, where scientists believe they have been singing their tune for nearly 12,000 years.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year Colorado’s Great Sand Dunes became a national monument (later a national park)
1932
Approximate size (in acres) of Great Sand Dunes National Park
150,000
Tons of sand and gravel used globally each year, mostly for construction and manufacturing
50 billion
Year the sci-fi novel “Dune” was released, followed by film adaptations in 1984 and 2021
1965

Bing Crosby’s 1942 recording “______” was inspired by the Great Sand Dunes’ song.

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Bing Crosby’s 1942 recording “The Singing Sands of Alamosa” was inspired by the Great Sand Dunes’ song.

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Having “perfect pitch” may be genetic.

Musical training has a lot to do with how well someone can carry a tune, though researchers believe that genetics may also play a role. Perfect pitch — being able to easily identify or replicate a particular note without any help — is often sought after by musicians, but is considered relatively rare. An estimated one to five people out of every 10,000 have the ability. Remarkably, perfect pitch often runs in families, leading some scientists to believe there’s a genetic component to musical talent. However, you don’t need to be a member of the von Trapp family to become a skilled singer. Some studies show that children who begin musical training by age 4 have a higher chance at developing perfect pitch, and in some cases, people develop the skill at older ages.

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 Enrico Morando/ Alamy Stock Photo

Watermelon snow may sound like something from the Candy Land board game, but the phenomenon is very real — Aristotle even wrote about a “reddish” snowbank he found on Mount Parnassus in the fourth century BCE. Visitors to Antarctica, the Himalayas, the Rockies, the French Alps, and Yosemite National Park have also glimpsed this colorful occurrence. In the 1800s, Scottish botanist Robert Brown finally determined the culprit: a species of algae called Chlamydomonas nivalis. Under a microscope, single-celled C. nivalis appear green, but they also feature a secondary red pigment, astaxanthin, which is a carotenoid, part of the chemical family that can make carrots orange. This astaxanthin is dormant for much of the year, but when winter ice and snow start to thaw and the algae surface to divide and photosynthesize, they trigger their astaxanthin as a barrier against the sun’s harsh UV rays, turning red in the process. Some say this rosy snow smells sweet and fruity, although experts warn that eating large amounts can cause digestive problems. 

The visiting locker room at the University of Iowa's Kinnick Stadium is painted pink.

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Former Iowa football coach Hayden Fry requested the paint job upon joining the staff in 1979. Fry, who had a master's degree in psychology, felt the color calmed opponents. After Fry's 20-year tenure, pink toilets, showers, and lockers were added to complement the walls.

Algae is responsible for creating much of the world’s oxygen and forming the basis for most food webs; thousands of species exist. Algae is also often a factor associated with major color changes: Dunaliella algae are believed to be one origin for the pink lakes that draw shutterbugs to places such as Australia, Senegal, and Spain, and many experts hypothesize that Trentepohlia algae led to the red rains that fell in Kerala, India, between July and September 2001. Recently, cold climates on different continents have witnessed an increase in clusters (or blooms) of C. nivalis algae, and scientists are working to understand why. Besides red, the blooms can appear green, gray, or yellow. 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Coldest temperature (in degrees Fahrenheit) ever recorded, in Vostok, Antarctica, in 1983
-128.6
Films in the “Pink Panther” series starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Jacques Clouseau
5
Minimum varieties of watermelon grown around the world, in a total of 96 countries
1,200
Weight (in pounds) of the largest snow cone ever created, courtesy of a Lubbock, Texas, company
25,080

Elvis Presley had a pink ______.

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Elvis Presley had a pink Cadillac.

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Watermelon seeds were found in King Tutankhamun’s tomb.

King Tut was just 19 years old when he died in approximately 1324 BCE. When British archaeologist Howard Carter unsealed his tomb in 1922, he found 116 baskets and 12 additional containers full of goods and treasures that were meant to help the late pharaoh transition to the afterlife. In 1988, a graduate student in London named Christian Tutundjian de Vartavan came across 30 small cardboard boxes that had been languishing in a Royal Botanic Gardens storage room since their contents were discovered by Carter. Within the boxes, de Vartavan found around 25 plant food species that had once been inside the tomb, including sesame seeds, millet, barley, black cumin seeds, coriander, and watermelon seeds. However, more than 3,300 years ago, wild watermelons were the opposite of the juicy, sweet produce we think of today, and were likely included less for their deliciousness than for their hydrating properties.

Jenna Marotta
Writer

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

Original photo by releon8211/ Adobe Stock

Should you ever have to call 911, don’t worry about how many bars you have — you can make emergency calls even without cell service or a SIM card. This has been the case since the Wireless Communications and Public Safety Act of 1999 took effect, as one provision of the law required the Federal Communications Commission to make 911 the universal emergency number for all telephone services. This is why iPhones sometimes say “SOS only” and Android phones display the message “emergency calls only” when you don’t have reception.

You can text 911.

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You can indeed text 911 instead of calling, but not everywhere. The service is offered only in certain areas, and calls are preferred.

There’s a caveat, however: Calls made from phones without active service can’t automatically deliver your location to the dispatch center, which also won’t be able to call you back if you become disconnected. Another unfortunate side effect is an increase in prank calls made from phones without service, as they’re essentially untraceable; children given phones without service as toys can sometimes make errant emergency calls as well. 

Because call centers are required to find out whether an emergency actually exists, such calls are a burden on the system — so use this safety net responsibly if you ever have to use it at all. Nonetheless, this is still an improvement on the pre-911 system, which required people to remember the phone number of their local police or fire station.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average hourly pay for a 911 dispatcher in California
$25
911 calls made per year
~240 million
Seasons of the TV show “9-1-1” as of 2025
9
Percentage of emergency calls made from cellphones
80%

The first 911 call was made in ______.

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The first 911 call was made in Haleyville, Alabama.

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911 was chosen as the emergency number by AT&T.

The idea of implementing a nationwide emergency number dates back to 1957, when the National Association of Fire Chiefs suggested adopting a single number for reporting fires. It took another decade for the FCC to formally meet with AT&T about doing so, and in 1968 the company established 911 as the chosen digits. There were several reasons for this: 911 is short, easy to remember, and a number that can be dialed quickly, and it had never before been used in any other context prior to its implementation.

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 Library of Congress/ Unsplash

Ulysses S. Grant is one of the most important figures in U.S. history. A brilliant tactician and military strategist, he served as the commanding general of the Union armies toward the end of the Civil War, bringing them to victory, then served for two terms as the United States’ 18th president (1869–1877). So it’s strange that many Americans don’t know his real name. Born Hiram Ulysses Grant on April 27, 1822, Grant went by the name Ulysses from a young age (even when boys teased him with names like “Useless Grant”). So where does the “S” come from? 

Walt Whitman published Ulysses S. Grant’s memoirs after his death.

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By 1885, several business failures had left Grant in financial ruin. Dying from cancer and afraid for his wife’s future, Grant finished his memoir days before his death. The book, published later that year by his friend Mark Twain, earned Julia Grant $11 million in today’s dollars.

In mid-June of 1864, during the height of the Civil War, Congressman Elihu B. Washburne had the same question and wrote to Grant in search of an answer. “In answer to your letter of a few days ago asking what ’S’ stands for in my name,” Grant wrote in response, “I can only state nothing.” Twenty-five years earlier, when U.S. Congressman Thomas Hamer nominated Grant to the prestigious military academy West Point, he wrote the then-17-year-old’s name as “Ulysses S. Grant,” thinking his middle initial was “S” for his mother’s maiden name, “Simpson.” Grant tried to remedy the error but to no avail — the “S” even appeared on his diploma. The mistake proved prophetic as the object of his lifelong devotion became embedded within his very name: U.S. Grant.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Lines in Homer’s epic poem “The Odyssey” (the hero’s name, Odysseus, was eventually Romanized as “Ulysses”)
12,109
Length (in feet) of the General Ulysses S. Grant Memorial, the largest equestrian monument in the U.S.
252
Approximate year (CE) the letter “S” entered Old English, according to the OED
1000
Number of Union soldiers under Grant’s command at the end of the Civil War
1,052,038

After the capture of Fort Donelson in 1862, Northern newspapers nicknamed the Union general ______.

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After the capture of Fort Donelson in 1862, Northern newspapers nicknamed the Union general Unconditional Surrender Grant.

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Ulysses S. Grant wasn’t the only president with an unusual “S” middle initial.

As Grant approached the end of his life, another future president’s life was just getting started. Born in Lamar, Missouri, on May 8, 1884, Harry S Truman had a middle initial that wasn’t a mistake like Grant’s, but instead honored both of Truman’s grandfathers — Anderson Shipp Truman and Solomon Young. Unable to decide which of them to honor, Truman’s parents just put “S” with no period. From the very beginning of his presidency, this middle initial was a controversy. Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone tried to give Truman a middle name during his oath of office in 1945, stating, “I, Harry Shipp Truman,” only for Truman to reply, “I, Harry S Truman.” Other erroneous middle names adorned correspondence to Truman throughout his life, but in the end, the 33rd president’s middle name was simply “S.”

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 Grzegorz Czapski/ Alamy Stock Photo

It probably isn’t 10:10 as you’re reading this, but you’d be forgiven for thinking it is if you just watched an ad for a clock or watch. Timepieces are almost always set to that exact time in advertisements, and as with most aspects of advertising, this choice isn’t arbitrary. 

The time 10:10 is considered aesthetically pleasing because it looks symmetrical on the face of analog watches and clocks, something anyone who prefers things to be neat and tidy will appreciate. It also helps that this position allows the company’s logo to not only be visible but perfectly framed by the hands pointing to 10 and 2. And this isn’t done just some of the time: In 2008, for example, The New York Times found that 97 of the 100 bestselling watches on Amazon were set to 10:10 in their pictures.

Atomic clocks are the most accurate kind.

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They’re so accurate, in fact, that some will gain or lose only a second of time over the course of tens of millions of years.

This ubiquitous hand placement has another, more subtle advantage: It looks like a smiley face. A 2017 study on the subject published in Frontiers in Psychology found watches set to 10:10 “showed a significant positive effect on the emotion of the observer and the intention to buy.” Those set to 8:20, which looks more like a frown and was the standard setting in the 1920s and ’30s, had no such effect. Like a lot of advertising tricks, it’s not evident to most consumers  — but that doesn’t mean it isn’t working.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Rolex sales revenue in 2024
$11.43 billion
Employees of the Swatch Group
36,000
Approximate year the world’s oldest clock was built
1386
Percentage of consumers who wore a watch daily as of 2017
32%

“O’clock” is a contraction of “______.”

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“O’clock” is a contraction of “of the clock.”

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France experimented with 10-hour days during the French Revolution.

Humans have been keeping time according to the sexagesimal (based on 60) system for at least 4,000 years, starting when the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians introduced the concept. The system is based around the number 12 — hence, there are 12 months in a year, 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, and 24 hours in a day.

Not everyone was a fan of this system, however. As part of the sweeping changes introduced during the French Revolution, the country experimented with decimal time, which is based around the number 10. In the system, a minute is 100 seconds, an hour is 100 minutes, a day is 10 hours, and a week is 10 days.

Decimal time was formally adopted in 1793 but never truly caught on. Everyone already had working duodecimal clocks, the new 10-day week interrupted religious ceremonies due to there no longer being Sundays, and tracking leap years wouldn’t have worked properly. France said au revoir to decimal time when it was officially suspended on April 7, 1795.

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.