This one is patently false:
It’s named after Dr Salmon, true, but he did not discover it:
[You wanna be nitpicky? Make sure you get it right!]
This one is patently false:
It’s named after Dr Salmon, true, but he did not discover it:
[You wanna be nitpicky? Make sure you get it right!]
Well, as long as Alaska is still a state, it’s wrong. Start at Nome (a whopping 28,276.30 square miles [23,012.66 land]) and work you’re way down.
The man in the Iron Mask was a product of Dumas fiction based on the fellow in the velvet masked. Its like poinitng out that Hitler didn’t have a turtle shell, just becuase Yurtle was a Turtle
I always thought the title was “The Revelation of/to St. John”, although I don’t have a bible handy to check (and the ones I find online refer to the book as either).
Guess what, so was Charlie Chaplin.:rolleyes:
Maybe watching the X-men movie will reduce this one.
Are we talking American football or what the rest of the world calls football (soccer)? Based on this I’d think there are more rabid soccer fans than baseball 
I’ve had college road-trips that ended that way too.
This one is false:
Behold Sardinops sagax, the Pacific Sardine! Besides which, a pilchard is a sardine.
WTF? Atari is still very much in existance although they dropped the console division many years ago, plus they moved their headquarters to Japan shortly after doing so. IIRC, the name was chosen simply because it means “prepare to be attacked” and that it sounds cool.
Ask Mapquest to find Podunk and it lists CT, NY, VT, two in MI, none in either ID or MA.
I don’t know about it being inherited but it’s possible for cats to become desensitized to catnip.
Nobody can claim they know Blackbeard’s surname for certain. It might have been “Thatch”, not “Teach”.
No, Peanuts is sort of a sequel. While Li’l Folks used many of the same gags, that strip had no continuing characters.
No, but I believe the original had been sinking until it was relocated to Arizona.
Yep, Aunt Jemima was as real as Cecil is now. 
Rodents have been known to eat their offspring if a human handled them too much.
Doesn’t that violate the laws of physics?
Unless I’m mistaken, humans acquired it from amadillos.
Not that again!
So they are aware of Snopes! Too bad they haven’t checked more of their “facts” there.
Muscles neither pull nor push - they contract. Depending on how the muscle in question is attached to the bone (via tendons, of course), that contraction can result in either a pushing or pulling motion on a limb.
This one is just stupid: all eels are fish. However, electric eels aren’t considered “true” eels (which are members of Elopomorpha). Electric eels are, instead, members of clade Ostariophysi. Both groups are teleost fishes.
Nope, it’s actually caused by the laws of physics, drag, shear and all that. Good explanation here. Note that I haven’t reviewed that site itself for bad science, but the basic explanation that droplets of some sizes will be deformed by drag forces and are not spherical or teardrop shaped is correct.
From linked site:
I have got to learn to type faster! :mad:
Thanks. The science textbooks all those years ago were obviously wrong.
So what? You don’t need to own a horse to ride on one.
You can use statistics to prove anything. How many rich people are there? How many poor people are there?
:rolleyes:
What were we saying about statistics, again? How much are theater tickets? How much are football tickets? Does “the arts” include concerts and movies?
I had no idea that the Panama Canal was one way.
CookingWithGas:
That definition was established by international convention. It may have been an arbitrary selection, but once selected, referring to it is not “without rhyme or reason.”
I agree that your definition is very reasonable. But I wouldn’t say, like you did, that the other definition is not at all reasonable. That’s all I’m saying.
Chaim Mattis Keller
>I can’t see how this is possible. Adding water to sand to the >extent that voids between the grains are filled adds weight >withouth increasing volume. How can this one be true?
I can’t see it either, although humid air is lighter than dry air.
While the location of the Prime Meridian certainly was established by international convention, the designation of parts of the Earth’s surface as “easternmost” or “westernmost” was not, much less exactly where these areas are.
Ironically, that article contains the following egregious error:
The USA included only 46 states in 1910. Arizona and New Mexico weren’t admitted to the Union until 1912.
From Dribbleglass.com:
In my dictionary, one definition of “corn” is “the leading cereal crop in a particular place, as wheat in England or oats in Scotland and Ireland”. The Biblical “corn” could have been barley, rye, or wheat.
Actually, Harpo was Adolph before he was Arthur, but the name change was not effected by the rise of Hitler. Once again, our friends at Snopes have the skinny:
http://www.snopes.com/movies/actors/harpo.htm
The correct spelling of the Hawaiian peak’s name is Mauna Kea
If you take the Earth’s “midriff bulge” into account, Ecuador’s Mount Chimborazo grabs the crown at 36,000 feet.
http://www.buzzle.com/editorials/1-30-2002-9769.asp
“It’s untrue that the “rings” under our eyes darken. Experts say this effect is actually caused by the rest of the face getting lighter.”
I’m no “expert”, but I’m pretty sure this one’s bunk. My bags have been purple at times.
“Karl Marx, the founder of Russian Communism…”
WTF? He didn’t found “Russian Communism.” He founded Communism/Marxism, whatever. It wasn’t Russian by nature.
“Karl Marx, the founder of Russian Communism, was never in Russia in his life.”
“Russian Communism”? Huh?
“Contrary to popular belief, Man is not the world’s largest polluter. A single volcanic eruption causes many, many times more atmosphere-depleting pollution than we have throughout human history.”
“The sound you hear when you hold a seashell to your ear isn’t coming from the shell. The sound is that of the blood coursing through your ear.”
Ok, I’m stopping now…guess they should have checked them with the Dopers first…