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15 Facts that are Nearly IMPOSSIBLE to Believe

Published: March 4, 2023 at 8:44 PM (PT)

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Information Sources

Antarctica Facts

https://nsidc.org/learn/parts-cryosphere/ice-sheets/ice-sheet-quick-facts

Antarctica Holds 70% of all Fresh Water

https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/1997/antpanel/3enviro.htm

Kármán Line

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%A1rm%C3%A1n_line

Altitude of the ISS

https://www.kennedyspacecenter.com/blog/the-20-most-frequently-asked-questions-about-the-international-space-station

NASA Planetary Factsheet

https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/planet_table_british.html

Fall Time to the Center of the Earth (no air resistance)

https://phys.org/news/2015-03-fall-hole-earth.html

Fall Time to the Center of the Earth (with air resistance)

https://keisan.casio.com/exec/system/1231475371

Terminal Velocity of a Human

https://www.fai.org/page/isc-speed-skydiving

Speed of Average Private Plane

https://executiveflyers.com/how-fast-do-small-planes-fly

Tsunami Facts

http://www2.tulane.edu/~sanelson/Natural_Disasters/tsunami.htm

Speed of Average Airliner

https://epicflightacademy.com/flight-school-faq/how-fast-do-commercial-planes-fly

Largest Tsunami

https://www.alaskasnewssource.com/2022/09/01/fault-facts-worlds-largest-tsunami-was-our-backyard

Height of the Empire State Building

https://www.esbnyc.com/sites/default/files/esb_fact_sheet_4_9_14_4.pdf

Pacific Ocean Facts

https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/facts/pacific-size.html

Water Facts

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrosphere

How Much Ocean has been Explored (outdated)

https://oceanliteracy.unesco.org/ocean-exploration

Amount of Marine Species Discovered Each Year

https://www.scubadiving.com/how-often-do-scientists-discover-new-life-in-ocean

Amount of Mammals Discovered Each Year

https://www.forbes.com/sites/quora/2019/04/03/how-many-new-mammals-are-discovered-every-year

The Blue Marble Facts

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blue_Marble

Mariana Trench Facts

https://en.wikipedia.org/Mariana_Trench

Average Weight of an SUV

https://www.jdpower.com/cars/shopping-guides/how-much-does-an-suv-weigh

Pressure Required to Break Aluminum

https://www.machinedesign.com/materials/article/21812864/aluminum

Pressure Required to Puncture 12 Gauge Steel

https://www.mittlerbros.com/media/pdffile/Tons_of_Pressure_Required_to_Punch_Mild_Steel.pdf

Number of Missions Made to the Top of Mt. Everest (outdated)

https://www.thebmc.co.uk/everest-facts-and-figures

Mount Everest Facts

https://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/mount-everest

How Much Submarines Shrink at Challenger Deep

http://www.deepseachallenge.com/the-sub/sub-facts

The Minimum Temperature

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero

Infinity isn't a Number

https://brilliant.org/wiki/infinity

Heart Rate of a Blue Whale

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/11/diving-blue-whales-heart-beats-very-very-slowly/602557

Blue Whale Heart Weight

https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/feature-story/big-hearted-blue-whale

How Far You Can Hear a Blue Whale's Heartbeat

https://www.cshwhalingmuseum.org/blog/5-things-you-never-knew-about-a-whales-heart

Dolphins are the Second Most Intelligent Animal

https://sentientmedia.org/which-animals-are-most-intelligent

Dophins have Guided Ships

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelorus_Jack

Dolphins Call Each Other by Name

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/all/dolphins-call-each-other-name-flna1c8451952

Dolphins Sleep One Half at a Time

https://us.whales.org/whales-dolphins/how-do-dolphins-sleep

Voice of the Deep

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9iZFbRVULI

Dogs are One of the Most Intelligent Animals

https://www.rd.com/list/smartest-animals

Dogs Sense of Smell

https://iheartdogs.com/15-incredible-facts-about-dogs

Average Pond Size

N/A (calculated from dozens of sources)

Storage Capacity of the Human Brain

https://www.medanta.org/patient-education-blog/what-is-the-memory-capacity-of-a-human-brain

Resolution of the Human Eye

https://www.discovery.com/science/mexapixels-in-human-eye

Equivalent FPS of the Human Eye

https://www.calendar-canada.ca/faq/how-many-fps-can-the-eye-see

Size of an Average Pixel

https://www.scantips.com/basics1d.html

Watt Usage of the Human Brain

https://press.princeton.edu/ideas/is-the-human-brain-a-biological-computer

Watt Usage of Computers

https://news.energysage.com/how-many-watts-does-a-computer-use

Watt Usage of a Supercomputer

https://www.businessinsider.in/tech/enterprise/news/supercomputers-have-become-faster-and-more-powerful-but-making-them-energy-efficient-is-the-need-of-the-hour/articleshow/92495353.cms

Swifts Facts

https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/10/27/499635084/this-bird-can-remain-airborne-for-10-months-straight

Bones in the Human Body

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537199

Number of Bones in the Feet

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK536941

Number of Bones in the Hands

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK279362

Volume of the Hands

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/154193128603000417

Volume of the Feet

N/A (no longer available)

How Long a Snail Can Sleep

https://www.azpetvet.com/can-certain-snails-really-sleep-for-3-years

Lifetime of a Snail

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_snail

Number of Languages That go Extinct

https://languageconservancy.org/language-loss

Graphic Sources

Antarctica (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/antarctica-country-nature-world-7822204

Yellow Car (Daniel Roberts)

https://www.alamy.com/just-an-orange-car-image471694088.html

Ground Surface (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/grass-ground-dirt-rocks-green-7855873

Ground (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/ground-rocks-dirt-nature-flat-7855872

Small Plane (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Cartoon Airliner (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/airplane-plane-aircraft-airliner-7719425

Dolphin (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/dolphin-animal-baby-mammal-cartoon-7036679

Fox (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/fox-animal-cartoon-mammal-5671150

Empire State Building (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/empire-state-building-building-city-7845819

SUV (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/suv-car-vehicle-automobile-7871132

Cartoon Mt. Everest (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/everest-mountain-snow-himalayas-7866337

Deepsea Challenger Submersible (Daniel Roberts)

https://www.shutterstock.com/image-vector/illustration-deepsea-challenger-dcv-1-submarine-2264582799

Calculator (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/calculator-device-electric-7832583

Blue Whale (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/whale-blue-nature-animal-wild-7728288

Human Heart (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/heart-anatomy-human-organ-veins-7735546

Steamliner (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/ship-boat-old-steam-oceanliner-7866333

Man Silhouette (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Man Hammering (Life-Of-Vids)

https://pixabay.com/videos/hammer-nail-carpentry-carpenter-277

German Shepherd (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Water Drop (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/water-drop-liquid-fluid-nature-8904702

Pond (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/pond-nature-lake-water-trees-7866335

Human Brain (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/brain-human-anatomy-organ-body-7822205

Human Eye (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/eye-human-blue-organ-look-view-7884585

Laptop (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/laptop-computer-technology-business-7884573

Desktop Computer (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/computer-desktop-screen-monitor-7884572

Supercomputer (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/supercomputer-futuristic-computer-7884574

Swift (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/swift-bird-nature-animal-wild-7871134

Desk Fan (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Rocket (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/rocket-spaceship-launch-fire-stars-7757105

Human Hand (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/hand-palm-fingers-human-person-8238235

Human Foot (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/vectors/foot-human-side-person-man-woman-8238234/

Snail (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Audio Sources

Narration (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Deep Open (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/music/solo-piano-deep-open-9284

Mulitmedia button click 79 (Unknown)

N/A

Fallen Comrade (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/music/main-title-fallen-comrade-20788

Jet fly-by (Unknown)

N/A

Map Location (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Hit-3 (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Counting1 (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

Chart Ballad-with strings (Daniel Roberts)

N/A

A Little Bit (Daniel Roberts)

https://pixabay.com/music/introoutro-a-little-bit-855

Chapters

0:00

Intro

0:12

Nearness of Space

0:58

Falling to the center of the Earth

1:34

The speed of tsunamis

2:13

The MASSIVE Pacific Ocean

2:52

The INSANE pressures of Challenger Deep

3:59

The minimum temperature

4:30

Dividing by zero

5:27

The loudest heartbeat

6:01

Dolphins are the smartest

7:12

Dogs sense of smell is INSANE

7:35

Humans are really efficient

8:32

Swifts are even more efficient

8:54

Your bones are all lopsided

9:19

Snails are sleepyheads

9:34

Languages go extinct

9:57

Outro

Subtitles

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Did you know that Antarctica's 7.2 million

cubic miles of ice holds 70 percent of our

fresh water?

Here are 15 other facts that

are nearly impossible to believe.

We generally think of space as being really

far away, but in reality, it's not actually that far.

The generally accepted altitude of space,

or rather, the imaginary line where space begins,

is the Kármán line.

The Kármán line is of course not a physical

object, but instead just an altitude where an

imaginary line sits that we defined as the border

between space and not space.

It sits at 100 kilometers or 62.1 miles above

sea level.

That might sound like a long way but,

if you could drive on a vertical highway,

it would only take about an hour to reach the Kármán line.

For comparison, if you instead wanted to plan

your road trip all the way to the Moon,

it would take over 4 and a half months.

Yeah, space really isn't that far away.

The biggest issue, really, is just driving straight up.

Although, what's not an issue is falling straight down.

Unless of course you're standing on the ground in

which case you can't really fall anywhere.

Except to the ground I guess.

And, while it takes about an hour to reach space,

if you fell in a hole that went straight to the center

of the Earth it would take over 19 minutes to

reach the bottom of that hole

(or the center of the Earth).

That's long enough for light to travel to the moon

and back over 445 times!

Although, if you counted air resistance into that,

it'd actually take more like 33 hours.

Most of that time you'd be traveling around 120mph!

That's the speed of a small plane!

Something that's even faster than that,

though, are tsunamis!

Tsunamis can travel at speeds nearly 600

miles per hour! That's faster than most airliners!

At that speed, a tsunami could travel across the

entire Pacific Ocean in less than 13 hours!

Of course, this is the speed of the waves out in

the middle of the ocean.

Near the shore, the speed decreases and the

height increases. This is what causes waves to

break. In fact, out in the middle of the ocean,

the tsunamis can be over 300 miles long.

While most tsunamis are only a few feet in height,

tsunamis can occasionally reach heights of over

1700 feet which is taller than the Empire State Building!

Oh, and even though a tsunami can travel across

the Pacific Ocean in just 13 hours, the Pacific Ocean

is actually larger than all the land masses on Earth combined!

In fact, the Pacific Ocean covers about 30 percent

of the Earth's surface!

And combining all the rivers, lakes, and oceans together,

around 71 percent of the Earth's surface

is covered with water!

Perhaps the reason why we've only explored about 5

percent of our oceans.

In fact, around 2000 new marine species are discovered

every year! Compared to mammals which we only discover

about 50 new species every year.

With all this water covering most of the Earth's surface,

it's no wonder the Earth was nicknamed the “Blue Marble”.

Speaking of the Pacific Ocean,

in the western Pacific Ocean,

near the Mariana Islands,

lies the Mariana Trench, which you might know is the

deepest place in the ocean.

The deepest portion of the Mariana Trench has been

named “Challenger Deep”, and for good reason.

You see, down at a depth of over 36,000 feet,

you have that much water stacked on top of you.

And because of this, the pressure at that depth is nearly

8 tons per square inch which is the equivalent of having 3

SUVs sitting on just one square inch! That's enough

pressure to break aluminum and puncture 12 gauge steel!

This is why only 22 missions have been made to those

incredible depths. Compared to the nearly 7000 missions

made to the top of Mt. Everest!

Any submarines that travel to the insane depths of

Challenger Deep have to be specially designed to

not break under nearly 7 miles of water!

That's well over a mile deeper than Mt. Everest is tall!

In fact, submarines can shrink by about 2 and a half inches

from the immense pressure at those depths.

Rather surprisingly though, the temperature at this

depth is generally only about 35 degrees Fahrenheit which

really isn't that cold for being so far from sunlight.

I mean, it can't get too cold anyway, though, because,

believe it or not, there is a limit to how cold anything can get.

The minimum temperature being -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit.

The reason nothing can get colder than this temperature,

is because heat is produced by particles

(like atoms and molecules) jostling around,

so the minimum temperature is when the these particles

are perfectly still. This temperature, of course, being

-459.67 degrees Fahrenheit,

which is exactly 0 degrees Kelvin.

Speaking of zero, if you've ever tried to divide a number

by 0 on a calculator, you might have gotten

a “divide by zero error”.

This is because division is the exact opposite of multiplication.

And anything multiplied by 0 is 0.

So the question arises, what is something divided by 0.

Well, if you divide anything by a number between 1 and 0,

the number actually grows. This is the exact opposite of

multiplication where anything multiplied by a number

between 1 and 0 shrinks.

What's interesting is that the size of the resulting number

increases as the dividing number decreases.

Until you of course get to 0 at which point the

resulting number is unknown.

Well, kinda. I mean, it's clearly infinity.

Although, infinity certainly isn't a number.

If you think about it, this does actually make sense.

I mean, if division is the opposite of multiplication and

anything multiplied by 0 is infinitely small, which is what 0 is,

than anything divided by 0 should be infinitely large.

Something that's also large, although not infinitely large,

of course, are blue whales.

Blue whales have a heart that beats only once

every 10 seconds and weighs nearly a ton!

In fact, the heart beat is so loud that it can be heard up

to 2 miles away! Is that why blue whales

don't have stethoscopes?

Although, combined with all the various noises in the

ocean and the fact that humans ears simply don't

work well underwater, you probably wouldn't be able

to hear it yourself. But if the ocean was completely

silent and you had hydrophones for ears,

you most certainly could. I think marine animals

are some of the most amazingly designed creatures!

And yet another amazingly designed marine animal,

are dolphins. Dolphins are very special for many reasons.

The most notable being that they are the second most

intelligent animal on the Earth, second of course to humans.

Although, if you ask me, they're probably actually smarter,

we just won't admit it. I mean, dolphins have even guided

ships through dangerous waters.

When was the last time you had to guide a dolphin?

In fact, dolphins are so intelligent that they even call each

other by name! Not in English of course, but in specific whistles.

Dolphins also only sleep one half at a time.

So while one eye is closed, the other eye is open.

While one half of the brain is sleeping,

the other is wide awake. This is to protect

themselves from danger. How many humans do you know

that sleep while watching for danger?

Dolphins can also tell the difference between metals

while blindfolded! This is of course possible because

of their amazingly designed sonar, or echolocation,

but it's still yet another thing where dolphins exceed

the capability of humans.

I think dolphins are definitely smarter than humans.

Although...I guess, I might just be biased because...

dolphins are rather cute...

and humans really aren't doing a good job

of proving their intelligence.

And speaking of intelligence, dogs are one of the

most intelligent creatures.

They're not quite as intelligent as dolphins though,

but one way they exceed humans is of course in their

sense of smell. A dog's sense of smell is so good

that it can detect a teaspoon of sugar in

a million gallons of water! To put that into perspective,

a million gallons of water is the size of the average pond!

Even though humans aren't as smart as they claim to be,

we still have an amazing design.

A great example of this being our efficiency.

Not how good we are at getting work done,

I mean there's few humans that are good at that,

but instead how efficient our body is. Your brain, for example,

can store about 2.5 million gigabytes of data!

The resolution of the human eye is about 576 megapixels,

and we can detect up to 150 frames per second.

The average pixel uses about 3 bytes of space.

So just in vision alone the human brain can process

the equivalent of 260 gigabytes per second.

That's about the speed of the average computer!

And to do all this incredible work, our brain only

uses about 12 watts of power! For comparison,

the average laptop uses about 50 watts of power.

The average desktop computer can use up to 500 watts of power!

And the most powerful computers on Earth (known as supercomputers)

use up to 10 million watts of power!

Yeah, the human brain is rather efficient!

Speaking of efficiency, swifts, a type of bird,

can stay airborne for up to 10 months!

They have this ability because they of course

eat insects, most of which are in the air.

Swifts also have this ability since they can sleep while flying.

I'm beginning to think that all our computers, airplanes,

and other inventions, aren't actually as

great as we thought they were.

Anyway, there are 206 bones in the human body.

And what's so amazing about this, is that a quarter of these bones

...are in your feet.

That's 26 bones per foot!

Although, over a quarter of your bones are in your hands.

That means over 51 percent of your bones are in your

hands and feet. That's quite a bit when your hands

and feet are only about 2.3 percent the

volume of your entire body.

Oh and remember how dolphins sleep one half

at a time? Well snails aren't quite so good.

In fact, a snail can sleep for up to 3 years!

Snails only live for 3 to 15 years!

So 3 years would be a large portion of their lifetime!

You know something else that is related to lifetime?

Language. Most likely, you've spoken at least one

language for most of your life. And that language

probably still exists today.

But, believe it or not, every 40 days, another language

or dialect goes extinct.

That's 9 languages per year!

That means in just 10 years,

over 1 percent of the current languages will be extinct.

Hey I did it!

I got a Gen-Z to watch 10 minutes of science!

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