I came across these recently from various websites and found them really fascinating. Are there are any other examples you can think of?
[ul]
[li]Oxford University is older than the Aztec Empire.[/li][li]Sharks have been around longer than trees.[/li][li]Stegosauruses lived closer in time to us than to t-rexes.[/li][li]Cleopatra lived closer in time to the Luxor pyramid in Las Vegas than the Egyptian pyramids at Giza.[/li][li]Mammoths were still alive when the pyramids were built. Wonder if they helped?[/li][li]The fax machine was invented while people were crossing the Oregon Trail.[/li][li]Nintendo was founded in 1889 – as a playing card company.[/li][li]Humans reached outer space before accepting plate tectonics.[/li][li]Tiffany & Co. (the jewelry store) is older than Italy, the country.[/li][/ul]
Agreed, the stegos were Jurassic beasties, which was well before the late-Cretaceous T-rex.
And the Wrangel Island mammoths were a dwarf variety and probably the last surviving population (until about 1600 BC IIRC). They would not have been very useful as draft animals for pyramid builders.
Genghis Khan came on the scene 100 years AFTER the Crusades started. I always think of him as barbarian, so pre-history, or at least, ancient times. But nope. He’s practically modern.
Along the same lines, the Roman Empire (if we accept the eastern part of the empire as the continuation of the Roman Empire) didn’t fall until just a few years before the discovery of the New World (1453 to 1492). And the Ottoman Turks held on to the shreds of their empire until the First World War.
Not sure it fits this thread - but the first humans to reach New Zealand discovered gigantic eagles that lived there, which (allegedly) occasionally ate people.