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Some 500 million years ago, an ancient fishlike creature produced at least one offspring with a curious mutation — twice the number of genes. These excess genes began developing in new directions, eventually creating more and more complex brains. Some 150 million years later, human ancestors roamed the land, and their brains continued to grow in complexity. About 2.5 million years ago, hominid brains started growing especially large, although scientists aren’t exactly sure what led to that sudden burst. Yet after millions of years of evolutionary experimentation, the human brain is a biological wonder many times more efficient than any artificial equivalent — in fact, it’s even more efficient than a 60-watt light bulb.

Humans have the world’s largest brain-to-body mass ratio of any mammal.

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Humans rank pretty high among all mammals, with a brain-to-body mass ratio of 1:40. However, when it comes to mammals, tree shrews (Tupaia belangeri) have the biggest ratio of them all, coming in at a ratio of 1:10.

Take, for example, IBM’s Watson, the supercomputer that famously bested Jeopardy! champions on daytime television in 2011. Watson uses around 85,000 watts to electronically outfox a human. Meanwhile, its biological competitors’ brains run at around 20 watts. It’s true that when compared to the rest of the human body, the brain is a greedy customer, requiring about 20% of our energy use. It uses two-thirds of that energy to send signals along its neurons, and the rest for cell-health “housekeeping.” But when it comes to everything our brains do for us — and how efficient they are overall — that seems like energy well spent.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average weight (in pounds) of an adult human brain
3
Year the watt, named after inventor James Watt (1736–1819), became an official unit of measurement
1960
Number of neurons (nerve cells responsible for transmitting messages) in the human brain
86 billion
Speed (in mph) that brain information can travel along the alpha motor neuron in the spinal cord
268

The ______ has the largest brain by weight (up to 20 pounds) of any animal.

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The sperm whale has the largest brain by weight (up to 20 pounds) of any animal.

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The idea that humans use only 10% of their brain is completely false.

The “we use only 10% of our brain” myth is one of Hollywood’s favorite premises. Found in films such as Phenomenon (1996), Limitless (2011), and Lucy (2014), the general idea is that the human brain is an organ of almost limitless potential. If people could only access all of their brain, rather than just the usual 10%, humanity could become a race of superbeings — or so the theory goes. The idea is great for selling popcorn, but not so great when it comes to scientific reality. For one, evolution makes it highly unlikely that a species would evolve with an organ that requires so much energy and is then only used at 10% of its capacity. Sections of the human brain specialize in certain tasks, so while it’s possible for only part of the brain to be activated, the whole brain is still very much in use. In fact, scientists have yet to discover any part of the human brain that does nothing.

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 Simon Lee/ Unsplash

There are entire websites devoted to whether or not Mercury is in retrograde at any given moment, and all the while Venus is spinning backward (compared to most other planets). As a result, the sun rises in the west and sets in the east on the second rock from the sun. Though no one’s entirely sure why our fiery neighbor rotates to the beat of its own drum, it’s been theorized that it originally spun in the same way as most other planets (counter-clockwise when viewed from above), but at some point flipped its own axis 180 degrees. So while its rotation appears backward from our earthbound perspective, it might be more accurate to say that Venus spins the same way it always has, just upside-down.

A day on Venus is longer than a year there.

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A day — or the length of time it takes for the planet to spin on its axis — lasts 243 Earth days on Venus, while a year (one complete rotation around the sun) lasts 224.7 days. This is by far the longest day in the solar system, with Mercury coming in second (about 59 days).

Some scientists think the flip might have been the result of a situation arising from the planet’s extremely dense atmosphere along with the sun's intense gravitational pull, though the scientific community has yet to reach a consensus. For all that, Venus has often been referred to as Earth’s sister planet — even more so than Mars. We’re the two closest neighbors in the solar system, have similar chemical compositions, and are roughly the same size. One crucial difference: Venus probably cannot support life.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Average surface temperature (in degrees Fahrenheit) on Venus
847
Moons orbiting Venus
0
Miles between Earth and Venus when the two are at their closest
38 million
Grand Slam titles won by Venus Williams
7

Venus is named after the Roman goddess of ______.

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Venus is named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty.

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Venus is the second-brightest natural object in the night sky.

If you can only make out one object in the night sky other than the moon, it’s almost certainly Venus. It has the highest albedo — a term used by astronomers to describe a planet’s brightness — of any planet in the solar system, reflecting approximately 70% of the sunlight that hits it and its highly reflective clouds. (Enceladus, an icy moon of Saturn, outshines it by reflecting a full 90% of sunlight, making it the most reflective body in our solar system.) Venus is also relatively nearby and can sometimes be seen during daytime with the naked eye. Because it’s easiest to see just before sunrise and just after sunset, Venus has been nicknamed both the morning star and evening star (ancient people actually thought it was two separate planets).

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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About 1,350 potentially active volcanoes dot the Earth today, and the lion’s share of them can be found along a 25,000-mile-long horseshoe-shaped ribbon that borders the Pacific Ocean. This Circum-Pacific Belt, more commonly known as the “Ring of Fire,” is home to some of the most volcanically active areas in the world, including Southeast Asia, New Zealand, Japan, Chile, Alaska, and parts of the contiguous United States. These volcanoes are largely formed at subduction zones, when denser tectonic plates slip underneath lighter plates. This subduction turns the Earth’s dense mantle into magma, which eventually bubbles up as volcanoes.

Hawaii is the most active area along the “Ring of Fire.”

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The 50th U.S. state isn’t part of the “Ring of Fire” at all. Hawaii is actually in the middle of the Pacific Plate, far from the volcano-making subduction zones. Its six islands were formed as the plate was dragged over a huge plume of magma that rose up to pierce the Earth’s crust.

The “Ring of Fire” is home to about 90% of all earthquakes, and in the past 150 years, deadly volcanic explosions — from Indonesia’s Krakatoa in 1883 to Mount St. Helens nearly a century later — have happened along this dangerous stretch. But although the “Ring of Fire” is known for its destructive nature, it’s also a force of creation. Alaska’s Aleutian Islands are the result of Ring of Fire subduction zones, and many continental mountain ranges, such as the Cascades in the Pacific Northwest and the Andes in South America, also owe their existence to the subterranean drama unfurling just beneath the surface.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year Johnny Cash released the song “Ring of Fire” (about falling in love, not volcanoes)
1963
Top approximate speed (in mph) of an eruption’s pyroclastic flow, a cloud of hot gas and volcanic matter
435
Year “Dante’s Peak,” in which Pierce Brosnan plays a volcanologist, was released
1997
Height (in feet) of Mars’ Olympus Mons, the tallest known volcano in the solar system
72,000

The tallest active volcano in the world is ______, located on the island of Hawaii.

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The tallest active volcano in the world is Mauna Loa, located on the island of Hawaii.

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Volcanoes caused the largest mass extinction in Earth’s history.

Around 252 million years ago, life was going great — until it wasn’t. The Permian extinction, known even more ominously as “The Great Dying,” is the largest extinction event in Earth’s history. It was even more devastating than the asteroid-induced extinction that ended the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago. In fact, the Permian extinction wiped out 95% of all marine and 70% of all terrestrial species. What could be more deadly than a 6-mile-wide asteroid? Siberian volcanoes. Known as the Siberian Traps in modern-day Russia, these volcanoes spewed ash and gases for hundreds of thousands of years at a rate that hasn’t been seen since. This toxic mixture slowly warmed the planet, raised ocean acidity, and possibly damaged the Earth’s protective ozone layer, allowing deadly UV-B radiation to ravage plant life. The Permian extinction definitively closed one major chapter in Earth history, but it also cleaned the slate for another to begin. After all, the next geologic period — the Triassic — saw the rise of the first dinosaurs.

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 EyeEm Mobile GmbH/ iStock

You may have grown up testing your nerve in front of the mirror by chanting in the dark to see if any spirits would appear. And while this may not summon ghosts, it turns out it can summon illusions. Staring into a dimly lit mirror for an extended period of time can distort your perception of your own face, making it appear to warp, blur, or even morph into someone — or something — else.

This phenomenon, dubbed the “strange-face-in-the-mirror illusion,” was first described in a 2010 study by Italian psychologist Giovanni Caputo. Subjects were placed in a room lit by a 25-watt lamp behind them with a mirror about a foot in front of them. They typically began to perceive the illusion after less than a minute, and after 10 minutes of gazing, many reported eerie changes. 

More than 60% of participants saw “huge deformations” to their own faces, while others saw someone else entirely in their reflection, such as an old woman or a child. Almost 20% described seeing animal faces such as a cat, pig, or lion, and almost half experienced distorted perceptions of monstrous beings.

Ancient mirrors were made of volcanic glass.

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Obsidian, a volcanic glass, has been polished into mirrors since at least as early as 8000 to 6000 BCE in the Anatolian peninsula (modern-day Turkey).

The effect may seem frightening, but it isn’t supernatural — it’s neurological. When the brain is deprived of dynamic visual input, it quickly starts to adapt. Think of the optical illusions you’ve likely tried: In the lilac chaser, for example, a ring of lilac dots seems to vanish and a green dot appears in their place. This happens because of a process called the Troxler effect, in which staring at a fixed point can make surrounding details fade. 

At the same time, because our brains are wired to search for faces, the experiment can also result in subjects seeing the faces of their own parents or other loved ones staring back.

Interestingly, this kind of illusion isn’t limited to mirrors. Caputo found in another study that staring into someone else’s eyes in dim light can trigger similar — or in some cases, even more dramatic — hallucinatory experiences. Many participants saw facial deformities and monsters, but they also reported that colors seemed muted, the volume of surrounding sounds noticeably increased or decreased, time felt stretched, and they felt spacey and dazed.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Light-sensitive cells known as rods and cones in a human eye
~126 million
Year the first Magic Eye optical illusion book was published in North America
1993
Hours Thomas Edison’s 1879 light bulb lasted
~14
Distance (in light-years) to the Andromeda Galaxy, the farthest object visible to the unaided eye
2.5 million

The ability to see millions more colors than the average person is known as ______.

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The ability to see millions more colors than the average person is known as tetrachromacy.

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Those tiny specks in your vision are shadows inside your eyes.

The tiny dots that occasionally drift through your vision may seem to be specks of dust in the atmosphere, but those eye floaters, as they’re called, are actually shadows cast on your retina. They’re caused by clumps of collagen fibers floating around inside the gel-like vitreous body between the lens and retina.

When light passes through the eye, those tiny clumps block or scatter it slightly, creating the little shapes you see. The clumps also move as your eyes move, darting across your field of vision, and they’re more visible against bright backgrounds such as a clear sky or a white wall.

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 you think of Volkswagen, sausage probably isn’t what comes to mind. But since 1973, the car company has been producing its own prize-winning currywurst at its headquarters in Wolfsburg, Germany, which also happens to be the globe’s largest car-manufacturing plant. The location was once considered remote, so the company has always provided on-site meal options; today, thousands of currywursts are made daily at the plant, using a secret recipe of pork, curry, pepper, ginger, and other spices, and typically served ladled with spicy ketchup. (Both the sausage and the ketchup even have their own VW part numbers.)

Henry Ford invented the automobile.

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While Ford debuted the Model T in 1908, Karl Benz is often credited with patenting the first car in Germany in 1886. Benz's gas-powered prototype had three wheels. A four-wheel upgrade, the Benz Victoria, was unveiled in 1893.

The currywurst is not just a staple dish among assembly line workers and executives — five-packs are often given to customers and sold at dealerships, sports stadiums, and grocery stores. In 2018, Volkswagen sold 6.2 million cars and about 6.5 million of the 10-inch sausages; in 2024, it sold 5.2 million Volkswagen-branded vehicles and a record 8.5 million sausages. (The Volkswagen Group, which includes several other car brands, collectively sold 9 million cars in 2024.)

The sausages are so popular, in fact, that when the company announced in August 2021 that it was removing meat products, including the traditional currywurst, from its menus at the Wolfsburg canteen, there was an uproar. Even former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder weighed in, and the sausages were eventually brought back in 2023. Don’t look for them in the U.S., though: While the currywursts are available in at least 11 countries, Volkswagen is not on the list of suppliers allowed to export processed pork stateside. You can still get a taste of another European company with a surprise food bestseller, though: IKEA’s bestselling product is actually its meatballs.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year the VW Beetle became the first car to sell 20 million units
1981
Weight (in pounds) of the world’s largest sausage, created in Turkey and cooked by 250 chefs
3,836
Longest distance (in miles) driven with a standard tank of fuel, using a VW Passat 1.6 TDI BlueMotion
1,581.88
People who enjoyed the best-attended barbecue on record, a 2013 event held in Mexico
45,252

In the 1986 film “______,” Matthew Broderick's character poses as Abe Froman, “The Sausage King of Chicago.”

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In the 1986 film “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” Matthew Broderick's character poses as Abe Froman, “The Sausage King of Chicago.”

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Oscar Mayer Wienermobile drivers take a crash course at Hot Dog High.

Each year, a class of 12 Hotdoggers — recent college grads chosen to steer the promotional Oscar Mayer Wienermobiles across the country — relish the chance to learn the inner workings of their new vehicle. Before hitting the road in a 27-foot-long, 11-foot-high fiberglass frankfurter, the Hotdoggers attend a two-week training camp in Madison, Wisconsin, home of Oscar Mayer’s headquarters. The Hotdogger program was established around 1987; in 2019, the company received thousands of applications for the paid, full-time, year-long brand ambassador positions. During their time at Hot Dog High, attendees become well-versed in wearing their “meat belts,” riding “shotbun,” and operating the “bunroof.” They also select Hotdogger names, such as Jalapeño Jackie, Cookout Christian, and Spicy Mayo Mayra. Afterward, six Weinermobiles roam the U.S., spending every week in a different city and piling on about 50,000 miles annually.

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.

Original photo by slowmotiongli/ iStock

When they aren’t busy attacking yachts or starring in beloved children’s movies, killer whales have an even more impressive hobby: making their own tools

Scientists were initially unfazed by footage of the imposing creatures rubbing against one another for up to 15 minutes at a time because “whales do weird things,” as behavioral ecologist Michael Weiss told CNN. But a closer look revealed the animals were actually rubbing strands of kelp between their bodies.

The whitish-gray patch on a killer whale’s back is as unique as a human fingerprint.

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This pigmentation, called the “saddle patch,” varies from one animal to another and is used to tell them apart in the same way fingerprints are used to identify humans.

Researchers observed at least 30 instances of a behavior they dubbed “allokelping,” in which orcas detach bull kelp from the seafloor and manipulate it with their teeth before rubbing it between themselves, which scientists expect is a form of grooming, social bonding, or both. Cetaceans (a group of mammals that includes dolphins, whales, and porpoises) keep their bodies smooth and aerodynamic by frequently shedding dead skin, and allokelping could aid in that process.

The discovery marks the first time any cetacean has been observed using tools, but it isn’t altogether surprising — in addition to being, well, a little unusual, orcas in particular are known for their high intelligence and close social bonds.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Rotten Tomatoes score of the 2013 orca documentary “Blackfish”
98%
Years an orca can live
90
Different ecotypes (distinct populations) of orca
10+
Months in a female orca’s gestation period
17

“Orca” derives from a Latin word meaning “______.”

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“Orca” derives from a Latin word meaning “large-bellied pot.”

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Killer whales are found in every ocean.

Though best known for residing in the cold waters of locales such as Antarctica, orcas are found in every ocean: the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Antarctic (also known as Southern), and Arctic. This makes them the most widespread cetacean.

Of the approximately 50,000 killer whales in the wild, roughly half of them live in the waters near Antarctica. Other large population centers include such far-flung locations as Alaska, Argentina, Norway, and New Zealand.

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 Syldavia/ iStock

If the very idea of bullfights makes you see red, you’re not alone — even though bulls themselves can’t actually see the color. As is the case with other cattle and grazing animals such as sheep and horses, bulls' eyes have two types of color receptor cells (as opposed to the three types that humans have) and are most attuned to yellows, greens, blues, and purples. This condition, a kind of colorblindness known as dichromatism, makes a bullfighter’s muleta (red cape) look yellowish-gray to the animals. 

All babies are born colorblind.

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The rods and cones in our eyes that perceive color haven’t yet developed when children are born, meaning babies are colorblind. They begin seeing colors after about four months and can see all of them by the time they’re 5 or 6 months old.

So why are bulls enraged by the sight of matadors waving their muletas? The answer is simple: motion. The muleta isn’t even brought out until the third and final stage of a bullfight. The reason it’s red is a little unsavory — it’s actually because the color masks bloodstains. In 2007, the TV show MythBusters even devoted a segment to the idea that bulls are angered by the color red, finding zero evidence that the charging animals care what color is being waved at them and ample evidence that sudden movements are what really aggravate the poor creatures. 

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Weight (in pounds) of Big Black, the biggest bull in Iowa State Fair history
3,400+
NBA Championships won by the Chicago Bulls
6
Fighting bulls involved in the annual Running of the Bulls in Pamplona, Spain
6
Colorblind people in the world
300 million

The most common cattle breed in the U.S. is ______.

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The most common cattle breed in the U.S. is Black Angus.

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Most colorblind people are men.

One in 12 men are colorblind, while only one in 200 women are. That’s due to the fact that the red-green variant of colorblindness (in which people have trouble telling red, green, and sometimes other shades apart) — which is by far the most common type — is usually passed down via genes located on the X chromosome. Men only have one X chromosome and women have two, and in women, both X chromosomes need to have the relevant genetic issues for them to be born with red-green colorblindness. Blue-yellow colorblindness (confusing blue with green and yellow with red) and complete colorblindness (the inability to see any colors), meanwhile, are passed down via other chromosomes and affect men and women at roughly the same rate.

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 Max Fischer/ Pexels

Despite widespread belief to the contrary, pencils have never been made of lead. Like all roads, this misconception leads to Rome, where ancient people drew on papyrus scrolls with small pieces of lead, a soft (and toxic) metal that rubs off easily. 

Pencils actually contain graphite, a solid form of carbon, and have since the 1600s. Because the graphite people simply dug out of hills in the 17th century behaved similarly to lead but had a darker color, it was called “black lead.” It wasn’t until 1779 that German Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele determined graphite was pure carbon; a decade later, German chemist and mineralogist Abraham Gottlob Werner gave the substance the name we know it by today.

Ancient humans were familiar with lead.

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It’s sometimes called “the first metal” due to how long people have known about it, though gold and silver have been known to humans for roughly the same amount of time.

Somewhat surprisingly, pencil sales have held steady in recent years even as more and more aspects of daily life have been digitized. More than 3.7 billion of the writing tools were imported in 2022, largely thanks to grade-schoolers, as the implements remain the easiest, most intuitive way for students just learning to write to sharpen their skills — pun intended.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Year the patent for a pencil with an attached eraser was issued
1858
Words an average pencil can write
45,000
Pencils produced each year worldwide
14 billion
Times an average pencil can be sharpened
17

“Graphite” comes from the Greek word for “______.”

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“Graphite” comes from the Greek word for “write.”

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Algeria was the last country to stop using leaded gasoline.

Leaded gasoline was fully banned in the United States in 1996, by which time the substance had already done considerable damage. Most other countries followed suit within a decade, but a number of holdouts remained until fairly recently: Algeria, Iraq, Yemen, Myanmar, North Korea, and Afghanistan.

Algeria, the last country to continue using leaded gasoline, ceased doing so in July 2021, marking the end of a century-long practice that began thanks to tetraethyl lead’s engine-improving properties. The United Nations estimates that phasing it out has saved $2.44 trillion per year by reducing crime rates and health issues associated with lead.

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.

Illustration by Kiyomi Morrison; Photo by Ishan/ Unsplash

Despite covering most of the Earth, much of the ocean has yet to be explored — or even mapped. A 2014 seafloor map developed by an international team of researchers revealed every oceanic feature larger than about 3 miles across, which means we have a strong sense of underwater mountains, but smaller objects — like centuries-old shipwrecks — continue to elude us. 

We know more about the surface of Mars than we do about the ocean floor.

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As hard as it may be to believe, we have indeed mapped the surface of Mars in more detail than we have mapped the ocean, despite the fact that no one has ever set foot on Mars. The entire Martian surface has been mapped at a resolution of at least 100 meters (328 feet).

The Nippon Foundation-GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project hopes to survey the entire ocean floor in detail within the next nine years. In 2020, they estimated that 19% of the seafloor had been mapped in detail; in 2025, that figure was updated to 27.3%. (Precise resolutions vary with the depth of the ocean, but the project hopes to use a minimum grid of about 800 x 800 meters — or 2,625 x 2,625 feet — for the deepest portions.) They’re working quickly: When the project began in 2017, only 6% of the seafloor was mapped in detail. Yet they still have an area roughly twice the size of Mars to cover.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Depth (in feet) of the Mariana Trench, the deepest point on Earth
36,201
Percentage of the Earth’s surface covered by oceans
71%
Length (in miles) of the mid-ocean ridge, a huge underwater mountain chain
40,390
Number of known marine species (although an estimated 91% of the ocean’s species await scientific description)
240,470

The world’s smallest ocean is the ______.

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The world’s smallest ocean is the Arctic Ocean.

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The ocean isn’t blue because it reflects the color of the sky.

The ocean is blue because it acts as a kind of sunlight filter, absorbing colors from the red part of the light spectrum (long wavelength light) and leaving behind those in the blue spectrum (short wavelength light). What’s more, the ocean’s surface isn’t always blue — depending on what sediments and particles are floating in a given area, the light hitting them may result in a green or even reddish tint. There’s also the fact that most of the ocean has no color whatsoever: Very little light penetrates past a depth of 656 feet (the so-called “twilight” zone), and none at all makes it past 3,280 feet (the “midnight” zone).

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 ATU Images/ The Image Bank via Getty Images

Time zones can be confusing, but they beat the alternative. To wit: Before time zones were established in 1883, North America alone had at least 144 local times. Noon was when the sun reached its zenith, and in many places the only thing making time official was a town clock. This didn't affect many people’s day-to-day lives, as it often took several days to travel from one place to another, but confusion intensified once the expanding railroad system drastically cut travel times. Because time wasn’t standardized, coordinating schedules across multiple rail lines was nearly impossible, and travelers occasionally found themselves arriving at their final destination earlier than they’d departed. Sometimes, trains even collided.

China only has one time zone.

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Though it used to have five, China reduced that number to just one in 1949 — a decision made by the Communist Party to create national unity. Now the entire country is on Beijing Time, which has created logistical problems given the country’s massive size.

Those problems more or less evaporated after November 18, 1883, when American railroads adopted the first four time zones (Eastern, Central, Mountain, and Pacific) and all clocks in each zone were synchronized. The number of time zones rose to five with the passage of 1918’s Standard Time Act, which added Alaska. (The act also established the use of daylight saving time in the U.S., much to the chagrin of many.) Including its territories, the United States now has four more time zones — Chamorro (which is used in Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands), Samoa, Hawaii-Aleutian, and Atlantic — for a total of nine.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Different local times in use today around the world
38
U.S. states in more than one time zone
13
Countries that no longer use daylight saving time
68
Time zones in France, the most of any country (during some parts of the year it’s 13)
12

The first nation to implement daylight saving time was ______.

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The first nation to implement daylight saving time was Germany.

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The North and South poles don’t have official time zones.

If you’ve ever argued that time is no more than a human construct, you may enjoy learning about time zones at the North Pole. At once in “all of Earth’s time zones and none of them,” it has no official time zone — and neither does its southern counterpart. That’s because all 24 longitude lines (which mark the time zones) converge there, making them just about meaningless. Since both poles are generally uninhabited, there’s also no real need for an official time. Antarctica’s research stations get around this problem by observing either the local time of their home country or that of the nation closest to them. (There are no permanent research stations at the North Pole.)

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.