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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 the windiest city in the U.S.

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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.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

People who attended the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893
27 million
Estimated number of rivers in the United States
250,000
States you can see (on a clear day) from Chicago’s Willis Tower
4
Year an earthquake caused the Mississippi River to flow backward for several hours
1812

At more than 1,100 miles, the ______ is the longest human-made waterway in the world.

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At more than 1,100 miles, the Grand Canal of China is the longest human-made waterway in the world.

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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.

Original photo by Ekaterina79/ iStock

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.

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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.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

“Friday the 13th” movies as of 2026
12
Number considered the unluckiest in China
4
Maximum months that can pass without a Friday the 13th
14
Friday the 13th in 2025 (June)
1

The official term for the fear of Friday the 13th is “______.”

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The official term for the fear of Friday the 13th is “paraskevidekatriaphobia.”

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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.

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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. 

Malaria is found only near the equator.

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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.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Milligrams of quinine allowed in today’s tonic water, reduced to prevent side effects like nausea
83
Milligrams of quinine in prescription tablets used to treat malaria
500-1,000
Cases of malaria diagnosed in the U.S each year, mostly in returning travelers
2,000
Liters of modern tonic water you’d have to consume in one day to fight off malaria
20

The ______, a small Australian marsupial, glows under ultraviolet light.

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The wombat, a small Australian marsupial, glows under ultraviolet light.

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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.

Original photo by Ja'Crispy/ iStock

With their gravity-defying basketball trick shots, the Harlem Globetrotters can make a school assembly feel like the final matchup in 1996’s Space Jam. Promoter Abe Saperstein founded the legendary exhibition team in 1926 as a way to showcase the talents of Black athletes, who were not yet allowed to play on professional basketball teams. For 12 years, the Globetrotters played standard basketball, but then began adding the comedic routines that would earn them the title of the “Clown Princes of Basketball.” Today, the team doubles as goodwill ambassadors, constantly speaking out on the importance of bullying prevention and mental health, among other topics. In their 100-year history, the Globetrotters have drafted 10 honorary members, including Henry Kissinger, Bob Hope, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Whoopi Goldberg, Nelson Mandela, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Jesse Jackson, and Robin Roberts. Two others — Pope John Paul II and Pope Francis — added the title to what may already be the most famous job in the world.

Basketball was originally played with a soccer ball.

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This was the case from 1891 to 1929. The very first basketball games involved shooting soccer balls into peach baskets that were placed 10 feet off the ground and then using ladders to retrieve the balls.

In fact, both popes were literal globetrotters well before receiving the honor. During his 27-year papacy (1978-2005), polyglot Pope John Paul II visited 129 countries, more than all his predecessors combined. And Pope Francis, the first Latin American to lead the Catholic Church, accrued frequent flyer miles at a similarly fast pace — during his 12-year tenure, he visited more than 65 countries. The Globetrotters, meanwhile, remain the best-traveled basketball squad in history. Pope John Paul II welcomed the team to the Vatican in 1986 and 2000. The latter meeting fell on the eve of the Globetrotters’ 75th anniversary, so they presented His Holiness — then aged 80 — with an autographed “75” jersey and basketball. Pope Francis was slightly younger when he became an honorary member, in 2015. Player Flight Time Lang even helped Pope Francis briefly spin a basketball on one finger, to the delight of revelers in St. Peter’s Square.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Basketball world records broken by the Harlem Globetrotters over 48 hours in 2022
18
Reign (in years) of Italian-only popes before Poland’s Cardinal Karol Wojtyła became Pope John Paul II in 1978
455
Year Pope Francis — the first pope featured on the cover of “Rolling Stone” — released an album called “Wake Up!”
2015
Spectators when the Harlem Globetrotters played in Berlin in 1951, the largest crowd the team ever attracted
75,000

The Harlem Globetrotters were originally founded in ______.

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The Harlem Globetrotters were originally founded in Chicago.

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NBC aired a TV movie called “The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan’s Island.”

Gilligan’s Island has spent so many decades in syndication that it’s easy to forget CBS canceled the show in 1967, after just three seasons. Yet creator Sherwood Schwartz believed more hijinks awaited the S.S. Minnow’s stranded passengers, so he co-wrote a trio of TV movies that aired on rival NBC between 1978 and 1981. For the final installment, NBC executives successfully pitched Schwartz a plot where the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders find themselves stuck on the island with Bob Denver (Gilligan), Alan Hale Jr. (Skipper), and the rest of the returning ensemble. However, the Harlem Globetrotters were chosen to replace the cheerleaders because the latter had already committed to a competing special. In the end product, Gilligan and the rest of his former shipmates run an island resort called The Castaways, where the Globetrotters find shelter after their plane crashes in the Pacific Ocean. Somehow, the plot also involves the discovery of a new element called Supremium, robots, and (of course) a winner-takes-all basketball game, in which — spoiler alert — Gilligan scores the winning shot.

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

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Homer Simpson’s famed grunt has been ubiquitous both on the long-running animated series The Simpsons (which debuted in 1989) and in the collective imagination for decades now, with “D’oh!” getting its own Wikipedia article, YouTube compilations, and even a book. Yet not many people know the sound is actually a protected trademark owned by 20th Century Studios. Technically, it’s a sound mark, which the United States Patent and Trademark Office explains “identifies and distinguishes a product or service through audio rather than visual means” and "create[s] in the hearer’s mind an association” between a sound and a good or service. 20th Century Studios filed papers to trademark the sound (registration number: 3411881) in July 2001, and it was officially registered in 2008. Other examples of sound marks include the noise Darth Vader makes while breathing and that instantly recognizable Law and Order “chung chung” sound effect.

“D’oh” is in the dictionary.

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“D’oh” was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2001. It’s defined as “expressing frustration at the realization that things have turned out badly or not as planned, or that one has just said or done something foolish.”

Homer's utterance is hardly the only iconic Simpsons catchphrase — “¡Ay, caramba!” and “Okily dokily!” come to mind as well — but “D’oh!” may be the most enduring. TV Land placed it sixth on a list of the 100 greatest quotes and catchphrases in television history, ahead of such heavyweights as Fred Flintstone’s “Yabba dabba do!” and Seinfeld’s “No soup for you!”

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year “The Simpsons” debuted
1989
Viewers who watched “Bart Gets an F” in 1990, the most in the show’s history
33.6 million
Bart Simpson’s locker combination
36-24-36
Emmys won by “The Simpsons”
37

The “J” in Homer J. Simpson stands for ______.

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The “J” in Homer J. Simpson stands for Jay.

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The true location of Springfield has never been revealed.

What state do the Simpsons live in? According to one chalkboard gag, “The true location of Springfield is in any state but yours.” Despite creator Matt Groening once saying that the town was partially based on Springfield, Oregon, the show itself has made a joke of never revealing its actual location. There have been clues along the way, most of which contradict each other, but it’s likely that there will never be a definite answer. “I don’t want to ruin it for people, you know?” Groening has said of the phenomenon. “Whenever people say it’s Springfield, Ohio, or Springfield, Massachusetts, or Springfield, wherever, I always go, ‘Yup, that’s right.’”

Michael Nordine
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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 Andi Edwards/ iStock

You probably know the old saying, “If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it just may be a duck.” But there’s a slight wrinkle in that logic, because not all ducks quack the same.

Research has shown that ducks from different areas can develop regional “accents,” not unlike humans, that can be heard in their quacks. Professor Victoria de Rijke of London’s Middlesex University found that London ducks have a louder and rougher quack, described as sounding like a shout or a laugh, compared to the softer, more relaxed sounds of countryside quackers in Cornwall, England. Ducks are extremely adaptable creatures, and it's believed the city ducks made adjustments to compete with urban noise.

A duck’s primary waterproofing gland is called the wax gland.

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The uropygial gland, also called the preen gland or oil gland, secretes an oil that repels water.

Hunters and call makers (people who craft animal calls for hunting) have also picked up on these regional differences, honing in on distinct styles to match local duck flocks. From the loud, high-pitched calls made by the ducks of Tennessee's beloved Reelfoot Lake to the subtle, more infrequent quacks of Louisiana waterfowl, each style reflects years of close listening to ducks whose sounds have been shaped by their habitats.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Types of feathers ducks have (contour, flight, and down)
3
Year the Aflac Duck first appeared in a TV commercial
2000
Year the rare Madagascar pochard duck was rediscovered, after having last been seen in 1991
2006
Degrees of vision mallard ducks have around their bodies
360

Ducks, geese, and swans are part of the same biological family called ______.

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Ducks, geese, and swans are part of the same biological family called Anatidae.

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The 1980s movie Howard the Duck led to the creation of Pixar.

In 1986, an early Marvel movie called Howard the Duck was released in theaters. The film was a notorious flop, widely panned for its overall off-key strangeness — but it helped lay the groundwork for a major Hollywood success story.

The movie’s executive producer, Star Wars creator George Lucas, tapped his company’s computer graphics team to help with the film’s post-production. Soon afterward, partially due to Howard the Duck’s failure, Lucas attempted to recoup some financial losses by selling that graphics division to Steve Jobs, who had recently left Apple computers (though he returned in 1997).

That division became Pixar, and in 1995, the company succeeded in making Toy Story, the first fully computer-animated feature film. Pixar would go on to redefine computer animation in the film industry.

Nicole Villeneuve
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Nicole is a writer, thrift store lover, and group-chat meme spammer based in Ontario, Canada.

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When Google Maps launched in 2005, it changed the way people get from Point A to Point B. But Google wasn’t content with merely revolutionizing everyday travel — the company wanted to recreate a 360-degree view of our world, and so launched Street View two years later. The idea was simple: Send out a fleet of vehicles equipped with cameras to document every inch of Earth. In fact, your abode is probably on Street View right now. But how to document places where vehicles can’t tread, whether in the sun-soaked deserts of the Arabian peninsula or the snowy peaks of Nepal?

Camels store water in their humps.

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A persistent camelid myth states that camels store water in their humps. However, camels actually store fat in their humps for energy reserves when food is scarce. If camels go hungry, their humps will shrink.

Well, you improvise. In 2014, Google hired an Arabian camel (as well as a handler) to explore the Liwa Oasis in the United Arab Emirates. The camel helped limit any disruption of the natural environment (compared to, say, a Jeep), and the camera, called a Trekker, rested on the animal’s hump. The oasis has some of the world’s tallest sand dunes, as well as a lush grove of date palms. For centuries, locals have enjoyed fruit from the palms, and used their trunks to weave tents and baskets

However, the oasis is far from the only unusual place Google has sent cameras. For more than a decade, the company’s Trekker program gave cameras to both local organizations and daring adventurers to capture amazing places for the Street View program. And yes, that includes Everest.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year Google CEO Larry Page began working on a prototype for Street View
2004
Amount of water (in gallons) camels can drink in one sitting
30
Number of Street View images captured by Google as of May 2022
220 billion
Year the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company discontinued its Joe Camel mascot
1997

The Arabian camel is also known as a ______, which derives from the Greek for “running camel.”

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The Arabian camel is also known as a dromedary, which derives from the Greek for “running camel.”

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In the 19th century, the U.S. Army used camels to explore Arizona.

In 1855, then-Secretary of War Jefferson Davis set aside $30,000 for the importation of camels for military use. Two years later, 75 camels were imported into the U.S. and pressed into military service, serving as beasts of burden bringing supplies among military outposts in the American Southwest. Although the camels performed their work admirably, the machinations of the mule lobby (who weren’t too happy about these imported, heat-resistant animals) and the onset of the Civil War spelled the end of the Army’s short-lived Camel Corps. The herds were sold off, with some joining circuses, working in mining operations, or simply going feral in the American West. Sightings of wild camels continued into the early 20th century, but the population was ultimately too small to survive.

Darren Orf
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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 Nikola Spasenoski/ iStock

As strange and perhaps alarming as it sounds, children in most of the United Kingdom are legally allowed to consume alcohol at home at the age of 5. (The exception is Scotland, which doesn’t have any minimum age for at-home alcohol consumption.) But that doesn’t mean a 5-year-old can go to an off-licence (a British liquor store) and buy a six-pack of beer — they certainly wouldn’t be served. 

In most circumstances, the legal drinking age in the U.K. is 18, meaning below this age, it’s illegal to buy alcohol or drink it in public, including in pubs and restaurants (with some exceptions for 16- and 17-year-olds if accompanied by an adult). However, the 1933 Children and Young Persons Act specifies it’s illegal to give alcohol to “any child under the age of 5 years.”

In the U.K., it’s illegal to handle salmon in suspicious circumstances.

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By order of the Salmon Act 1986, it’s illegal in the U.K. to handle salmon in “suspicious circumstances” — for instance, if the fish is believed to have been obtained illegally, perhaps through poaching. The law includes the furtive handling of trout, eels, lampreys, smelt, and freshwater fish.

Ergo, it’s technically permitted to give a child an alcoholic drink if they meet that age minimum, and, importantly, if they’re not in public. So in the privacy of one’s own home, it’s not against the law — though certainly not recommended — to give a drink to children 5 and up.

Strange as the law may seem, in some parts of the world (such as Scotland) there’s no minimum age at all for children drinking at home — including some states in the U.S. In 29 American states, minors of any age are legally allowed to drink in a private residence under parental supervision. 

The intent behind a low (or no) minimum age limit for drinking at home is harm reduction and making alcohol appear less like a tempting “forbidden fruit.” With no age restrictions, parents can teach responsible drinking in a controlled environment. In some countries, the consumption of small quantities of alcohol at home is also part of the culture — in France, for example, it’s quite normal for kids to drink a glass of watered-down wine at family meals.  

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Beer crates used to build the world’s largest beer crate pyramid
105,995
White Russians drunk by the Dude in “The Big Lebowski”
9
Maximum number of playing cards one can legally carry in Thailand
120
Value of the most expensive bottle of whiskey ever sold at auction
$2,734,254

The largest wine-producing country in the world is ______, which puts out around 4.4 billion liters annually.

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The largest wine-producing country in the world is Italy, which puts out around 4.4 billion liters annually.

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Beer coaster collecting is known as “tegestology.”

The hobby of collecting beer coasters, also known as beer mats, is tegestology. The first known written usage of the word dates to 1960, but the history of beer mats is much older.

Coasters as we know them today first made an appearance in the late 19th century, and around 1880, the German printing and board mill company Friedrich Horn began making small cardboard mats specifically for beer. Using cardboard allowed for greater absorption of spills and also opened up a whole new world of advertising. It was cheap and easy to print ads on the disposable coasters, and the mats soon appeared in pubs and bars across Europe.

Breweries began making their own coasters to distribute to pubs along with their ales, and the designs became increasingly colorful and ornate — and, ultimately, collectible.  Perhaps the most notable tegestologist is Leo Pisker of Langenzersdorf, Austria, who assembled a collection of around 152,860 different beer mats from 192 countries — a feat recognized by Guinness World Records.

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

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In January 1865, four months before the Civil War’s end, Harper’s Weekly published the story of a peculiar flour sack credited with raising thousands of dollars for injured soldiers. The tale — entirely true — began in Austin, Nevada, the previous year. On the eve of city elections, two wagering men, area merchant Reuel Colt Gridley and Dr. Henry Herrick, placed a bet on the vote’s outcome. The loser would pay up with a 50-pound sack of flour, but not before a dose of public humiliation: Whoever lost had to ceremoniously march down the town’s main strip with the bag, all to the tune of “John Brown’s Body” (a patriotic melody that would later inspire “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”). 

Enriched bread and flour were popularized during World War II.

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In the 20th century, white bread got its color from super-milled (and nutrient-lacking) flour. By World War II, federal agencies found soldiers were often vitamin-deficient, and promoted enriching flour with iron and B vitamins. It was such a success that 36 states required it postwar.

Within a day, the losing bettor, Gridley, was being cheered on by his fellow townsfolk — who turned out in numbers to watch the spectacle — as he followed a brass band down the city’s center, flour sack over his shoulder. At the end of his march, he handed the sack to the bet’s winner, Herrick, but not without first recommending it be donated to the Sanitary Commission, a relief agency that provided care for sick and injured Union soldiers. Herrick agreed, and soon after the hefty sack of flour was auctioned for $350. But in an act of gallantry, the winner asked that the sack be sold again, raising another $250. Surrounding towns joined in, and before long Gridley and the “Sanitary Sack of Flour” had gone as far as San Francisco and raised $63,000. Newspapers spread the story, leading the flour sack across the country, raising upwards of $275,000 (more than $4 million today), and ending up as far as New York City. Gridley, who had started the journey as a Confederate sympathizer, returned to Nevada an ardent supporter of the Union; the famed Sanitary Sack returned with him and remains on display in Reno at the state’s Historical Society Museum.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Medals of Honor awarded to Union troops by the war’s end in 1865
1,522
Bushels of wheat harvested in Union states during the war
100 million
Estimated varieties of wheat, broken into six main types
30,000
Approximate number of major battles in the Civil War
50

Before they’re ground into flour, the seeds of wheat plants are called ______.

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Before they’re ground into flour, the seeds of wheat plants are called berries.

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President Hoover’s presidential library has a flour sack collection.

Before he sat in the Oval Office, Herbert Hoover was a wealthy entrepreneur and philanthropist living in London at the outbreak of World War I. Using his political connections and social standing, Hoover founded the Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB) in 1914, a volunteer organization that raised food and funds for more than 9 million starving Belgian and French citizens trapped in a blockade between German and British troops. Through negotiations with both militaries, the CRB was able to distribute more than 5.7 million tons of food across 2,500 towns, while keeping a watchful eye on the sacks of flour involved. By distributing the empty cotton bags to sewing workshops, convents, and artists, the sacks were kept from the Germans, who used cotton in the manufacture of ammunition. Many of the bags were turned into clothing and pillows, but others were embroidered or painted with the purpose of being sold for relief funds that supported prisoners of war. In a show of gratitude, hundreds of the decorated flour sacks were sent to Hoover with hand-stitched sentiments from Belgian and French citizens — and today, 366 remain at his presidential library in West Branch, Iowa.

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 Unsplash+ via Getty Images

The average dollar bill doesn’t last forever: Some wear down from repeated use, while others meet their untimely demise after being ruined by water or pets. In fact, the average $1 bill has an estimated lifespan of 7.2 years, according to the Federal Reserve. This number drops even lower for $5 and $10 bills, which tend to last just 5.8 and 5.7 years, respectively.

In the United States, paper currency is made using a blend of 75% cotton and 25% linen, creating a material that’s more durable than paper produced using wood pulp. But bills still degrade over time; it’s estimated that U.S. banknotes can withstand only 4,000 double folds (forward and backward) before they tear and need to be replaced.

The U.S. once issued a glow-in-the-dark coin.

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It's a fib

That was actually America’s neighbor to the north, which put the first glow-in-the-dark coin into circulation. Canada unveiled the luminescent $2 coin in 2017 to celebrate the nation’s 150th birthday. It depicts two boaters rowing a canoe beneath the aurora borealis, which glows in the dark.

It’s worth noting significantly larger denominations that pass between hands less frequently, such as $50 and $100 bills, have longer lifespans. Those bigger bills are more commonly tucked away as savings and therefore suffer less wear and tear. The Federal Reserve estimates the average lifespan of a $20 bill at 11.1 years, a $50 bill at 14.9 years, and a $100 bill at 24 years.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year paper money was issued in the American colonies
1690
Value of coins thrown away by Americans each year
~$62 million
$2 bills currently in circulation
~$1.7 billion
Highest denomination of U.S. currency ever issued
$10,000

The $100,000 U.S. bill featured the likeness of ______.

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The $100,000 U.S. bill featured the likeness of Woodrow Wilson.

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Martha Washington is the only woman to appear solo on a U.S. banknote.

To date, Martha Washington remains the only real-life woman to appear by herself on U.S. paper currency, though there have been several instances of mythological women depicted on U.S. banknotes, as well as women in scenes alongside others. For example, the 1865 $20 bill features Lady Columbia —an early personification of the United States — on its obverse and the baptism of Pocahontas on its reverse.

The inaugural first lady’s portrait is seen on the obverse of the 1886 $1 silver certificate as well as a redesigned version issued in 1891. In 1896, Martha and George Washington appeared together on the reserve of a $1 silver certificate, denoting the only example of a married couple appearing jointly on U.S. currency.

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.