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are looking for information about unique and weird in the world in this
article konsultasisawit will deliver 53 unique and bizarre events from
around the world to you.
1. famous Russian composer Aleksandr Borodin, is also a respected chemistry professor at St. Petersburg.
2. in the state of Arizona, the United States, there are laws that prohibit hunting camels.
3. José Joaquin Araiza Chess Championship Mexico won 15 times in a row.
4. vera can move very quickly on land. When someone chased crocodiles, he should run winding, because crocodiles difficult to change direction abruptly.
5. distance from Honolulu to New York more than from Honolulu to Japan.
6. click the mouse once spent 0.0000024 kcal of energy. That means, if we eat a piece of chocolate, we need to click the mouse 765,551,000 times as much to spend calories that result.
7. Mikhail Botvinnik was the only person who ever three-time world champion chess. He has been the face of all the world chess champion in the 20th century, and is an early coach Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov. He never played chess just for fun!
8. mayor of Chicago, Richard J. Daley, commemorating St. Patrick in 1965 by pouring green dye into the river as much as 45.36 kg Chicago. Today St. Patrick is always associated with the color green.
9. the Empire State Building in New York City should be built at January 22, 1930. But Governor Alfred Smith, a prominent Irish-American, asked its construction was delayed until the Day of St. Patrick, in honor of the city's Irish heritage.
10. St. Patrick was not an Irishman. He was a British, possibly the Wales, and never saw Ireland until he was abducted by robbers Ireland.
11. cats have remarkable hearing power. Cat ears have 30 muscles that control the outer ear, while humans only have six muscles. These muscles can rotate 180 degrees, until it can be heard from all directions, without having to move his head.
12. at the end of the Beatles song, A Day in the Life, recorded whistling ultra sound can only be heard by dogs. The sound was recorded by Paul McCartney for Shetlandnya sheepdog.
13. windmills are often used as a symbol of the Netherlands originally created in Iran in the year 644. This mill was used to grind cereals.
14. in the mid-1990s the average visitor Grand Canyon in Arizona, the U.S. every day, reaching more than 13,000 people. Due to the fragile natural environment, now the number of visitors to this very restricted.
15. during Nyepi, the Hindu Dharma is not traveling (observe lelungan), does not light a fire / light (observe geni), does not do the job (observe the work), and not allowed to have fun (watching lelanguan).
16. in 1984, Jeff Bezos wanted to name his business on the internet Cadabra, as in Abracadabra - or bingo. But his lawyer assured him that the English names that sound very similar to the body (cadaver). Consequently, Bezos took the second option, Amazon.com.
17. at the beginning of the 20th century, a boxing match with prizes often take up hundreds of rounds. The fighters compete with his bare fists, without boxing gloves.
18. after a robber and a murderer with his brother Jesse, Frank James lived in peace for 32 years. He was selling souvenirs at the James farm, worked as a peddler shoes and checktaker in theaters in Missouri, USA.
19. in the grocery store, the goods are cheaper is usually placed on the bottom shelf, while the more expensive placed parallel to the eye.
20. the human body has about 2 million sweat glands. The average adult loses 540 calories with every liter of sweat, men perspire and 40% more than women.
21. name Fagin, a character in the novel Oliver Twist pickpockets Charles Dickens, derived from the name of a close friend of Dickens, Bob Fagin.
22. if young sea cucumbers fed red seaweed, shells then they will turn red.
23. Jana Bellin Malypetrova Hartston Miles, Britain's top female chess players is also an anesthesiologist that he regarded as the right job for chess players. As the face of danger, and the time available is only four minutes.
24. Jana Bellin Malypetrova Hartston Miles, Britain's top female chess players is also an anesthesiologist that he regarded as the right job for chess players. As the face of danger, and the time available is only four minutes.
25. to shave his beard and mustache, the astronauts need special shaver with vacuum as the vacuum cleaner, that haircut is not flying in the space vacuum.
26. before it became the center of the auto industry, the city of Detroit in the U.S. is the center of the cigar industry and chewing tobacco.
27. Liechtenstein and Uzbekistan are the only two countries in the world that does not have a border with the ocean and bordering countries not bordering the ocean as well.
28. the divorce rate in the U.S. is the highest in the world, 20.7 out of every 1,000 marriage. This number is followed by her Denmark, which is 13.1.
29. the planet Venus, the sun rises in the west and sets in the east, opposite than on Earth. Venus circulating from east to west, unlike the Earth and other planets.
30. first U.S. census conducted on March 1, 1790. The results show that the U.S. population at that time amounted to 3,929,214.
31. sneeze can reach speeds of about 250 kilometers per hour.
32. the state of Texas is the only state that had been under six flags, namely Spain, France, Mexico, Republic of Texas, Confederate State of America, and the United States.
33. according to the Detroit Free Press newspaper, 68 percent of all professional hockey players have lost at least one tooth.
34. Rodrigo de Triana is a sailor on board the Pinta in the group Columbus who first sighted land on the continent of America on October 12, 1492.
35. when sleeping during the winter, a marmot soil breathe only ten times in one hour, while when it is active, breathing 2100 times an hour.
36. when commercial telephone service between New York City and London was first introduced in 1927, the cost of the first three minutes of conversation is U.S. $ 75.
37. figures from the two sides of a dice always add up opposite each other 7.
38. in 1931, an industrialist named Robert Ilg built the Leaning Tower of Niles, a replica of the Tower of Pisa, the size of half of its original outside Chicago, Illinois, USA. He lived in the tower for several years.
39. Nicholas Breakspear was the only Englishman who had served as Pope. Name tenure was Pope Adrian IV and his tenure lasted between 1154-1159.
40. save icon in Microsoft Office shows a floppy disk with a cover that depicted upside down.
41. according to Aristotle, the heart is the place where human emotions.
42. when it first opened in 1965 Houston Astrodome was the largest air-conditioned room in the world. It is said that the building 18 floors fit in the room.
43. every queen or empress named Jane murdered, imprisoned, gone mad, died young, or overthrown.
44. in the early days of the film industry in Hollywood, the movie stars had to provide her own clothes for filming.
45. in the mid-1920s estimated that each year the city of Detroit, Michigan in the United States produced 210 million kg of 6,350,300 cigars and chewing tobacco.
46. table tennis game was created in the 1880s by James Gibb, a British engineer. At first, players use a champagne cork as a ball and a cigar box lid as a bat.
47. cockroach has exceptional durability. When his head removed from his body carefully so it does not bleed, cockroaches can survive for several weeks, and die of starvation.
48. table tennis sport originally named gossima. When it was first marketed, champagne corks were used as balls replaced with celluloid ball. After the factory named ping pong in 1901, the game became popular.
49. on January 28, 1687, Tokugawa Tsunayoshi enacted legislation in Japan that prohibits the killing of animals and eating any kind of fish, shellfish and birds.
50. Akebono Tarō, aka Rowan Haheo Chadwick, is (sumo wrestler) non-Japanese who first attained yokozuna, the highest level in the country's traditional wrestling match.
51. July 1518, a woman named Frau Troffea called runs on one narrow street in Strasbourg, France, and began to dance that lasted about four or six days in a row. At the end of the week, 34 people took part with the dance, and in a month, bizarre dance participants reached 400 people.
52. Mass psychogenic illness is Laughter Epidemic of Tanganyika in 1962. Genesis complete the conditions described in a paper published in the Central African Journal of Medicine, published in 1963. The outbreak began with the becandaan among the students in one dormitory in Tanzania, and from it, a young woman began to laugh uncontrollably. Firstly there is little laughter, which then grew longer, than just hours, to days.
53. 2006, Seawater coming into Mumbai, suddenly transformed into a sweet taste, and this phenomenon di'temukan 'by some penduduku Mumbai who suddenly feel the water in the river Mahim Creek, one of the most polluted rivers in India, which receives thousands of tons of raw sewage and industrial waste every day it suddenly becomes sweet. For several hours, residents of Gujarat said that the coastal sea change Teethal also sweet.
1. famous Russian composer Aleksandr Borodin, is also a respected chemistry professor at St. Petersburg.
2. in the state of Arizona, the United States, there are laws that prohibit hunting camels.
3. José Joaquin Araiza Chess Championship Mexico won 15 times in a row.
4. vera can move very quickly on land. When someone chased crocodiles, he should run winding, because crocodiles difficult to change direction abruptly.
5. distance from Honolulu to New York more than from Honolulu to Japan.
6. click the mouse once spent 0.0000024 kcal of energy. That means, if we eat a piece of chocolate, we need to click the mouse 765,551,000 times as much to spend calories that result.
7. Mikhail Botvinnik was the only person who ever three-time world champion chess. He has been the face of all the world chess champion in the 20th century, and is an early coach Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov. He never played chess just for fun!
8. mayor of Chicago, Richard J. Daley, commemorating St. Patrick in 1965 by pouring green dye into the river as much as 45.36 kg Chicago. Today St. Patrick is always associated with the color green.
9. the Empire State Building in New York City should be built at January 22, 1930. But Governor Alfred Smith, a prominent Irish-American, asked its construction was delayed until the Day of St. Patrick, in honor of the city's Irish heritage.
10. St. Patrick was not an Irishman. He was a British, possibly the Wales, and never saw Ireland until he was abducted by robbers Ireland.
11. cats have remarkable hearing power. Cat ears have 30 muscles that control the outer ear, while humans only have six muscles. These muscles can rotate 180 degrees, until it can be heard from all directions, without having to move his head.
12. at the end of the Beatles song, A Day in the Life, recorded whistling ultra sound can only be heard by dogs. The sound was recorded by Paul McCartney for Shetlandnya sheepdog.
13. windmills are often used as a symbol of the Netherlands originally created in Iran in the year 644. This mill was used to grind cereals.
14. in the mid-1990s the average visitor Grand Canyon in Arizona, the U.S. every day, reaching more than 13,000 people. Due to the fragile natural environment, now the number of visitors to this very restricted.
15. during Nyepi, the Hindu Dharma is not traveling (observe lelungan), does not light a fire / light (observe geni), does not do the job (observe the work), and not allowed to have fun (watching lelanguan).
16. in 1984, Jeff Bezos wanted to name his business on the internet Cadabra, as in Abracadabra - or bingo. But his lawyer assured him that the English names that sound very similar to the body (cadaver). Consequently, Bezos took the second option, Amazon.com.
17. at the beginning of the 20th century, a boxing match with prizes often take up hundreds of rounds. The fighters compete with his bare fists, without boxing gloves.
18. after a robber and a murderer with his brother Jesse, Frank James lived in peace for 32 years. He was selling souvenirs at the James farm, worked as a peddler shoes and checktaker in theaters in Missouri, USA.
19. in the grocery store, the goods are cheaper is usually placed on the bottom shelf, while the more expensive placed parallel to the eye.
20. the human body has about 2 million sweat glands. The average adult loses 540 calories with every liter of sweat, men perspire and 40% more than women.
21. name Fagin, a character in the novel Oliver Twist pickpockets Charles Dickens, derived from the name of a close friend of Dickens, Bob Fagin.
22. if young sea cucumbers fed red seaweed, shells then they will turn red.
23. Jana Bellin Malypetrova Hartston Miles, Britain's top female chess players is also an anesthesiologist that he regarded as the right job for chess players. As the face of danger, and the time available is only four minutes.
24. Jana Bellin Malypetrova Hartston Miles, Britain's top female chess players is also an anesthesiologist that he regarded as the right job for chess players. As the face of danger, and the time available is only four minutes.
25. to shave his beard and mustache, the astronauts need special shaver with vacuum as the vacuum cleaner, that haircut is not flying in the space vacuum.
26. before it became the center of the auto industry, the city of Detroit in the U.S. is the center of the cigar industry and chewing tobacco.
27. Liechtenstein and Uzbekistan are the only two countries in the world that does not have a border with the ocean and bordering countries not bordering the ocean as well.
28. the divorce rate in the U.S. is the highest in the world, 20.7 out of every 1,000 marriage. This number is followed by her Denmark, which is 13.1.
29. the planet Venus, the sun rises in the west and sets in the east, opposite than on Earth. Venus circulating from east to west, unlike the Earth and other planets.
30. first U.S. census conducted on March 1, 1790. The results show that the U.S. population at that time amounted to 3,929,214.
31. sneeze can reach speeds of about 250 kilometers per hour.
32. the state of Texas is the only state that had been under six flags, namely Spain, France, Mexico, Republic of Texas, Confederate State of America, and the United States.
33. according to the Detroit Free Press newspaper, 68 percent of all professional hockey players have lost at least one tooth.
34. Rodrigo de Triana is a sailor on board the Pinta in the group Columbus who first sighted land on the continent of America on October 12, 1492.
35. when sleeping during the winter, a marmot soil breathe only ten times in one hour, while when it is active, breathing 2100 times an hour.
36. when commercial telephone service between New York City and London was first introduced in 1927, the cost of the first three minutes of conversation is U.S. $ 75.
37. figures from the two sides of a dice always add up opposite each other 7.
38. in 1931, an industrialist named Robert Ilg built the Leaning Tower of Niles, a replica of the Tower of Pisa, the size of half of its original outside Chicago, Illinois, USA. He lived in the tower for several years.
39. Nicholas Breakspear was the only Englishman who had served as Pope. Name tenure was Pope Adrian IV and his tenure lasted between 1154-1159.
40. save icon in Microsoft Office shows a floppy disk with a cover that depicted upside down.
41. according to Aristotle, the heart is the place where human emotions.
42. when it first opened in 1965 Houston Astrodome was the largest air-conditioned room in the world. It is said that the building 18 floors fit in the room.
43. every queen or empress named Jane murdered, imprisoned, gone mad, died young, or overthrown.
44. in the early days of the film industry in Hollywood, the movie stars had to provide her own clothes for filming.
45. in the mid-1920s estimated that each year the city of Detroit, Michigan in the United States produced 210 million kg of 6,350,300 cigars and chewing tobacco.
46. table tennis game was created in the 1880s by James Gibb, a British engineer. At first, players use a champagne cork as a ball and a cigar box lid as a bat.
47. cockroach has exceptional durability. When his head removed from his body carefully so it does not bleed, cockroaches can survive for several weeks, and die of starvation.
48. table tennis sport originally named gossima. When it was first marketed, champagne corks were used as balls replaced with celluloid ball. After the factory named ping pong in 1901, the game became popular.
49. on January 28, 1687, Tokugawa Tsunayoshi enacted legislation in Japan that prohibits the killing of animals and eating any kind of fish, shellfish and birds.
50. Akebono Tarō, aka Rowan Haheo Chadwick, is (sumo wrestler) non-Japanese who first attained yokozuna, the highest level in the country's traditional wrestling match.
51. July 1518, a woman named Frau Troffea called runs on one narrow street in Strasbourg, France, and began to dance that lasted about four or six days in a row. At the end of the week, 34 people took part with the dance, and in a month, bizarre dance participants reached 400 people.
52. Mass psychogenic illness is Laughter Epidemic of Tanganyika in 1962. Genesis complete the conditions described in a paper published in the Central African Journal of Medicine, published in 1963. The outbreak began with the becandaan among the students in one dormitory in Tanzania, and from it, a young woman began to laugh uncontrollably. Firstly there is little laughter, which then grew longer, than just hours, to days.
53. 2006, Seawater coming into Mumbai, suddenly transformed into a sweet taste, and this phenomenon di'temukan 'by some penduduku Mumbai who suddenly feel the water in the river Mahim Creek, one of the most polluted rivers in India, which receives thousands of tons of raw sewage and industrial waste every day it suddenly becomes sweet. For several hours, residents of Gujarat said that the coastal sea change Teethal also sweet.
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