The world is an amazing place. Strange things happen all around us, all the time, but we mostly take them for granted.
For instance, can you believe we eat honey regularly and nobody is ever like “Wow, we are eating bee vomit, this is various kinds of gross? ” Or that we all just casually walk around with super-computers in our pockets? Or that for a while, everyone was really into pogs?
They were just newspaper circles! So many things in our world seem like they couldn’t possibly be real when you really, genuinely think about them.
But the objective is!
Advertisement
Blue whales do not seem real.

via: Shutterstock
If someone told you that the largest animal on a planet merely fees some of the smallest animals on that planet by filtering them through their mouth and sings beautiful underwater songs, you would probably say that was something a terrible science fiction novelist made up and that they need to write another draft with a more believable beast.
But blue whales are 100% real!
Advertisement
Blue whales are not only the largest animal on ground, they are the largest animal that’s ever been on earth.

via: Shutterstock
They can grow up to 100 feet long, about the length of three school buses.
They are bigger than a T-Rex, bigger than a brachiosaurus, probably bigger than the Loch Ness Monster, but that’s TBD.
Blue whales are so big, their hearts are the size of a small auto and a child could crawl through their aorta.
And yet, they eat plankton, microscopic organisms that float around in seawater.
Advertisement
Viruses are not exactly alive, but they can take over your cells and command them to make new products.

via: Shutterstock
You’ve likely heard of a virus before, it’s that tiny thing that get inside your body and builds you sick.
But what exactly is a virus?
You’ve probably never truly thought much about it before, except that you definitely don’t want one( especially the throw-up ones) but once you know, you honestly are going to question if they are real.
Advertisement
A virus is genetic material, surrounded by protein, that can only reproduce inside of another living thing’s cells.
Giphy
Basically, a virus is just a only piece of DNA or RNA and it wants to stimulate more of itself, but it doesn’t have the ability to get freaky with another single strand of DNA.( There’s no Tinder for viruses, unfortunately ).
Instead, it gets inside a cell of a living organism like a plant, or animal, or person, and it tells that cell to stop rendering whatever it was busy making before and instead to only produce more of the viruses’ genetic material.
Advertisement
A viruses hijacks your cells.
Giphy
So next time you get sick with norovirus or herpes or rabies, try not to freak out when you remember that a foreign strand of genetic material has literally taken over your body and forced it to do it’s bidding.
Human beings have been to the moon. TO THE MOON.

via: Shutterstock
On July 20, 1969, the USA was the first country to send astronauts to the moon.
They get out of the spacecraft and strolled on the surface of the moon, a heavenly body 238,900 miles away from the Earth where there is no oxygen, 83% less gravitation than Earth, and oh yeah, IS THE MOON.
Advertisement
We went to the moon before we devised luggage with wheels.
Giphy
The fact that we were able to blast human beings out of the earth’s atmosphere, into space, and then send their spacecraft in the right direction and touch down on the moon is already mind-blowing, but what’s even crazier is that we did this all before much of the technology we have today even existed.
There was no internet , no cell phones. Doorknobs had only been invented for less than a hundred years when we went to the moon. It’s insane.
Advertisement
In 1990, $500 million dollars worth of art was stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.

via: Getty Images
The largest art theft in history sounds like it came right out of a Hollywood movie, but it didn’t.
In the early morning of March 18, 1990, two men dressed as police officer entered the museum and said they were responding to a disturbance call.
The guards let them in. The thieves then handcuffed the guards and tied them up in the basement of the museum while they stole six paints, five sketches, an urn, and a bronze eagle.
Advertisement
The thieves were never caught, and the art has never been recovered.

via: Shutterstock
The stolen pieces included art by Degas, Vermeer, and Rembrandt.
Strangely, the thieves didn’t seem to know much about art.
While the pieces they stole were valuable, they were not the most valuable pieces in the museum.
Advertisement
There is a cave in Mexico that grows crystals so large a human can sit on them.

via: Pinterest
The Naica Mine in Mexico houses the largest crystals in the world.
The cave hosts gypsum crystals that can be up to 50 feet tall and four feet wide.
Located 1,000 feet below the surface, the giant crystals were formed by hydrothermal fluids from magma chambers above.
Even though the crystal caves are amazing, “youre supposed to” don’t want to go in them.

via: Pinterest
The temperature inside the caves is about 135 degrees F with 99% humidity, humans would suffocate if they were in the cave for too long.
And some have, the caves are closed to the public because a mine employee suffocated while attempting to steal some of the crystals.
Scientists who have explored the caves had to wear air-conditioned suits.
Advertisement
The Bubonic Plague was a disease so intense it killed about one third of the earth’s population.

via: Shutterstock
From 1347 to 1351, the Bubonic Plague swept Europe.
The world population went down from about 450 million to about 350 million and it took 200 years for the population to reach 450 million again.
The disease spread by fleas on the backs of rats and once someone caught it from a flea bite, they would likely die in three to seven days.
Advertisement
Strangely, the plague wasn’t all bad, though.
Giphy
At least not for the people who survived it.
Before the plague, Europe was overpopulated and people were constantly competing for resources. But after the beset, life became much less stressful, at least from an economic perspective.
Workers were paid more for their labor since there were fewer people to do it and living conditions improved without overcrowding.
So, as long as you didn’t think too much about all your dead friends and family members, you could at least enjoy your bigger apartment and hefty new salary.
Advertisement
Do you even know how weird platypuses are?

via: Shutterstock
If you were going down the listing of things that make animals birds, you might think platypuses were a type of aquatic bird: has a bill? Checks out. Lays eggs? Yup. Expends most of its time in the water? Alright. Webbed feet? It’s like, definitely a bird.
But wait, it also has fur and feeds its babies milk. That sounds more like a mammal.
But also, surprise: it’s venomous! Like a reptile.
So … what exactly is a platypus?
Advertisement
If you’re confused, you’re not alone.
Giphy
In 1799, when Europeans brought a platypus back to Europe from Australia, people thought it was a hoax.
British scientists guessed , not unreasonably, that the specimen had been sewn together from parts of other animals. But it wasn’t, platypuses are 100% real and 100% insane.
Platypuses, together with echidnas, are the only mammals that lay eggs. And are one of only a few mammals that are venomous( vampire bats and shrews are the others ).
Basically, platypuses march to their own beat and don’t follow anyone’s rules: they are the only member of their family and genus.
Beneath Odessa, Ukraine there are over 2,500 kilometers of winding, unmapped catacomb, three tales deep.

It seems like something out of a horror movie, but the Odessa Catacombs are real and the largest catacomb system in the world.
The catacombs are far larger and more complex than any other catacomb, the Paris catacombs come in at 500 kilometers and Rome at only 300.
They are so large that nobody has ever actually totally mapped the labyrinth of rooms.
Advertisement
The catacombs were built in the 1800 s as mines and were later converted to hideouts for smugglers.

via: Shutterstock
These days, people rarely go down alone, groups often explore together and keep detailed records so they don’t get lost. People have been known to get lost in the organizations of the system and die of dehydration before they ever find their way out.
A Reddit post in 2009 claimed to show the body of a student who was partying with her friends in the catacombs got drunk, strayed off, and was never able to find her way out.
Advertisement
Immortal jellyfish exist.

via: Shutterstock
Turritopsis dohrnii, a species of jellyfish found in the Mediterranean Sea and in the water off Japan technically can’t die.
It has the ability to go from fully matured jellyfish, back into a polyp state if it undergoes stress. Which entails it grows up, lives it’s jellyfish life, and then just goes back to being a newborn jellyfish again, without all the pesky death stuff.
Advertisement
They aren’t actually immortal, though.
While the jellyfish can continue to live forever if nothing is wrong with you, they can die.
Even the immortal jellyfish is not immune to being feed by another ocean beast or dried up on the sand by a particularly splashy wave.
Advertisement
When you think about it, hibernation is insane.

via: Shutterstock
We all know about hibernation, you learn in first grade that some animals go into a deep sleep during the winter in order to conserve energy and resources. But really think about hibernation. Do you know what it is? It’s not just a long nap. Hibernation is when an animal actually puts itself into suspended animation: it’s heart rate slows down, it’s body temperature drops significantly, it’s breathing slows and it suspenses the need for food, urination, or bowel movements. This can last for months.
We’ve all heard that bears hibernate, but they are actually not true hibernators.

via: Shutterstock
Surprise: the one fact you are aware of bears is actually incorrect. Bears virtually hibernate, they do the fun parts, basically. They store up fat and sleep for long periods of time in the winter( sign me up ), but they don’t actually hibernate because their body temperature remains the same and they do wake up from time to time. Bears actually go into what’s called torpor , not hibernation. Real hibernators are mostly small rodents like squirrels, mouse, and bats. They cannot be woken up during hibernation and their body temperatures can drop below freezing. Some animals even give birth while hibernating and then simply meet their new kids when they get up. It sounds like something out of a futuristic fiction, but it’s real!
Advertisement
There is a completely pink lake in Australia.

via: Shutterstock
Lake Hillier is Western Australia is completely, 100% bubblegum pink. That color you see in the photo above is real and it looks like that all year round. Scientists are not completely sure what causes the lake to look like it’s filled with Bazooka Joe, but they think it’s a combination of the algae that lives in the pond, bacteria, and a high salt content.
Advertisement
12 Things That Don’t Seem Real but Definitely Are
The world is an amazing place. Strange things happen all around us, all the time, but we mostly take them for awarded.
For instance, can you believe we eat honey regularly and nobody is ever like” Wow, we are eating bee vomit, this is various kinds of gross ?” Or that we all just casually walk around with super-computers in our pockets? Or that for a while, everyone was really into pogs?
They were just paper circles! So many things in our world seem like they couldn’t possibly be real when you really, really think about them.
But they are!
It seems incredibly contradictory but drive-through liquor stores are not only real, they are actually pretty common in the United States.
Advertisement
Identical twins are a thing humans beings can make.

You probably know at the least one set of identical twins and, be honest, you are probably a little fascinated by them. How strange is it that there can be two people walking around who appear exactly alike? Identical twins happen when a woman’s egg splits into two embryos after fertilization, so essentially at one point identical twins were going to be simply person or persons, but then their egg split, generating two identical people. It’s wild!
Advertisement
But what’s even crazier is that the egg can divide even more and make identical multiples beyond just twins.

via: Shutterstock
Nobody is quite sure why eggs divided to form identical twins, although it’s actually pretty common. It’s estimated that 12% of notions actually start off as a situated of identical twins, but fairly early on one of the divide embryos is assimilated by the body and never fully forms into a fetus, resulting in a single birth. Sometimes, the egg can even split more than just once and there can be sets of identical triplets, quadruplets, and even quintuplets!
The Dionne Quintuplets are the only known set of identical quadruplets to survive infancy.

via: Wikipedia
Born in Canada in 1934, the five identical daughters all lived into adulthood. But it wasn’t a great life. At four months old they were taken from their parents and raised in a compound where they were studied until they turned 18. They even had an outdoor playground that was used as an observation area for visitors to get a glimpse of the girls.
Advertisement
Cats domesticated themselves.

via: Shutterstock
You might have a little ball of fur purring on your lap as you read this, but don’t be fooled: cats are not actually technically domesticated animals. Domesticated refers to the process of taming wild animals and then breeding them selectively so that they can live with human beings and no longer have the ability to live in the wild. We did it with puppies, we did it with cows, we did it with goats, and sheep and pigs.
Advertisement
But, um, we never asked for cats.
Giphy
Cats just took it upon themselves to live among humen. They noticed we had warm houses and barns filled with mouse and we were willing to share our food and so they just said,” Ok, this stuff is ours now, thanks humen” and never left. If you’ve ever owned a cat, frankly, this probably doesn’t come as a surprise. While many individual cats depend on humans for food and care, as a species cats are not entirely dependant on humans to survive. Feral cats are genetically identical to house cats, but they are born in the wild and can live their entire life without human intervention. But you should never abandon a cat. Once a cat has lived with humans, it can’t go back to being wild.
Cats only grace us with their presence in exchange for kibble and a warm bed and we, their human slaves, give it to them and construct them internet famous. They’ve got it figured out.
Advertisement
Drive through liquor stores are very, very real.

via: Shutterstock
It seems incredibly contradictory but drive-through liquor stores are not only real, they are actually pretty common in the United States.
States like Texas, North Carolina, Louisiana, and Wisconsin all have stores where you can pick up some booze without ever having to get out of your automobile. Australia has them, too!
Advertisement
You’d think it was a bad idea to sell liquor to people who are already in the process of driving, but hey, why not.

via: Shutterstock
Theoretically the idea is that you’re not going to be drinking the alcohol in the car. Drive through liquor stores don’t merely sell single drinkings to the driver like you’re getting a milkshake at McDonalds, they sell six packs and bottles, etc, stuff you’d get at a grocery store or liquor store anyway, only this time you don’t have to actually get out of your vehicle. But it can be fairly jarring to find a sign for Mo’s Drive Through Likker Barn and think,” Wait, what ?”.