
25 Intriguing Facts That Aren’t Too Popular
A curious mind is always searching for something to keep it occupied. Little nuggets of information that are akin to pieces of a puzzle. If you’re a curious soul with a penchant for random information that not most people are aware of, scroll below.
Found on a thread inviting people to share the most incredible facts they know that most other people are unaware of, these rare facts are sure to intrigue your mind.

#1 In mid-2000s Kagoshima, Japan, an alarming rise in power blackouts was traced back to crows who were building their nests on top of electric poles. The power company formed a “Crow Patrol” in order to seek and destroy the crows’ nests. The crows responsed by building thousands of dummy nests as decoys. The war is ongoing.

#2 Lake Superior. On that lake is an island called Isle Royale. On that island is a lake. on that lake is an island. on that island is a pond, and on that pond is boulder. that boulder is the largest island on the largest pond on the largest island on the largest lake on the largest island on the largest lake in the world (by surface area).

#3 The earliest known public museum dates to circa 530 BCE and it had archeological Mesopotamian artifacts on display.

#4 Chicago “The Windy City” is known for political wind not regular wind.

#5 Solar eclipses are a completely random quirk of arbitrary factors. The sun is roughly 400x bigger than the moon. The sun is also roughly 400x further away from earth than the moon. Nothing created or enforces that ratio. It’s just a random happenstance that from our view, on the surface of this planet, the sun and moon seem roughly the same size, and can perfectly overlap.

#6 You can actually use the turn signal on your car to warn other drivers that you’re turning or changing lanes.

#8 Trees communicate.

#9 Sharks predate trees.

#10 The emotion you feel when realizing, that the people around you are complex human beings like yourself with emotions, memories and “someone inside there”, is called Sonder.

#11 Not mind-blowing but worth sharing: There are more libraries in the US than there are Starbucks.

#12 Switzerland, the country of neutrality, has unintentionally invaded its neighbor Liechtenstein 3-5 times…1968-2007.

3/4 times Liechtenstein didn’t know of it until Switzerland apologized.
The 1/4 was that one time Switzerland fired a missile and caused a forest fire, reparations were paid.
After one incident, the Liechtensteiners reportedly offered drinks to the Swiss soldiers.
A Liechtenstein spokesman said, “It’s not like they invaded with attack helicopters”.
#13 You have a holey face. Your sinuses are big empty cavities in your skull. The maxillary sinus is the biggest. It’s just under your eye (under the cheek bones) and I swear you could fit 3 grapes in each one. Except for when they are full of snot.

#14 When you put a bumper sticker or decal on, spray a couple sprays of diluted soapy water or simple green on the surface of the car first, then put the sticker down…. And you can slide it around until it’s even and centered. Use a credit card to squeegee the moisture out from underneath, pat dry, and leave it alone. It’ll adhere as it dries. No more crooked stickers.

#15 A compressed spring weighs more than when the same spring is at rest. The stored potential energy of the compressed spring makes it heavier. Really puts e = mc^2 into perspective.

#16 The weirdest animal in the world is the jellyfish called the Portuguese Man ‘o War (also called a bluebottle in Australia).

It gives birth via a process called “budding”, where a new animal just sort of pops off a random place on the jelly. But it doesn’t give birth to whole other jellyfish. It gives birth to many different types of animal-like creatures called “zooids”. They live on the bottom of the jelly, live independently from each other, but can’t survive without the others.
For instance, there’s a zooid that can digest fish, but can’t catch them. There’s a tentacle zooid that can catch fish, but can’t digest them. There are also several other zooids like that. Scientists have been scratching their heads about how to classify this creature, and are calling it a colony rather than an animal.
And that leads to an interesting question. What is the organism? Is it the zooid, because it moves around independently, but can’t really survive very long on its own? Or is it the whole jellyfish, in which case the zooids are a bit like organs, except for the fact that they might go for a walk occasionally?
And if you say that the whole jellyfish is the organism, maybe bees aren’t an organism either, but a beehive is?
That’s the problem with classification systems. As soon as you make one, along comes some weird example that makes you have to start again.
#17 Squirrels can’t find 80% of the nuts they hide.

#18 Modern postural yoga– the type and style predominantly practiced in Western countries– is about 100 years old. It was invented in India by Indians and is derived mostly from British calisthenics and Swedish gymnastics. It was specifically marketed to affluent westerners by Indians as a superior form of spiritual and physical exercise. It’s working as designed for its target market.

#19 The brain is the only organ that named itself.

#20 People aren’t persuaded to change their views with facts and this his been studied and proven. ETA there’s a YouTube video on the BrainCraft channel about this. It was put up in the last day or so if anyone is curious..

#21 Otters have pouches in their sides they keep their favourite rocks in for smashing open clams. It’s not just simians that use tools.

#22 In Turkey (the country) turkey meat is called “Hindi” (India).

#23 Shirley Temple led an extremely successful life as a diplomat after her childhood acting career. She was present in Czechoslovakia when the Soviet’s cracked down on them (as in, she seen people killed). Later after the fall of the USSR, she was the head of establishing diplomatic relations between the US and Czechoslovakia.

#24 The chainsaw was invented as a tool to aid in childbirth. Rotating blades to get through the pelvic bone…..

#25 Each (human) cell in your body has over 2m (6ft) of DNA in it.

Shanilou Perera
Shanilou has always loved reading and learning about the world we live in. While she enjoys fictional books and stories just as much, since childhood she was especially fascinated by encyclopaedias and strangely enough, self-help books. As a kid, she spent most of her time consuming as much knowledge as she could get her hands on and could always be found at the library. Now, she still enjoys finding out about all the amazing things that surround us in our day-to-day lives and is blessed to be able to write about them to share with the whole world as a profession.