And if the empty space was removed from the bodies of everyone in the world, the physical result would be the size of a sugar cube.
According to this dude on History of Science. I can’t wrap my head around that.
And if the empty space was removed from the bodies of everyone in the world, the physical result would be the size of a sugar cube.
According to this dude on History of Science. I can’t wrap my head around that.
[quote=“Shayna, post:67, topic:658117”]
[ul][li]Artichokes are flower buds. And if allowed to grow on the stalk, the fuzzy part you dig out to get to the heart after the leaves are gone becomes a gorgeous purple flower![/ul][/li][/QUOTE]
Also, carrots make a lovely, delicately-scented flower if allowed to go to seed.
Did you know that things appear fluorescent because a molecule reflects light at a higher wavelength than the original light that was shone on it?
I think your hemisphere argument is flawed; Canada entered into WWI the same time as Britain (as we were a British colony at that time), and entered into WW2 in 1939.
Emits, rather than reflects.
damn dirty apes?
Still speaking of ducks, don’t bump your head on that bar.
Did you know the poop transplants are a real thing?
This map shows the entire area explored by the Apollo 11 mission in comparison to the size of a baseball diamond.
Yeah, that.
Whose?
Did you know that you can find out what the outcome is for various procedures at any given hospital and how it compares to the national average? There’s also a separate database for infections from procedures.
Here is the main link where you can download the complete dataset if you want to do your own coding, but the interactive system is very nice I have to say.
What is the size and weight of the human stomach? - Answers No, you don’t. The stomach is quite small.
the human intestine is about 28nfeet long, plus about 8 inches of stomach.
Check your facts.
Some atomic weights are now expressed as a range rather than a single number. The latest heretics of the periodic table are bromine and magnesium
The crescent on the State Flag of South Carolina was not orignally intended to be a moon, but a gorget. It orginally pointed upwards, until 1910, when the State Historian changed it to look like a crescent moon.