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69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True

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The internet is a bottomless pit information — whatever random thought pops into your head, there’s probably a fascinating detail about it floating around somewhere. But here’s the caveat: some of the strangest truths are about things you’d never even think to look up in the first place.
Like what does something as oddly specific as a surgical smell resemble? Or why on earth were chainsaws originally invented? (Spoiler: not for wood.)
These aren’t exactly the kinds of questions that casually cross your mind during your morning coffee, but once you hear them… you need to know.
So, we scoured this online thread where people were asked to share the strangest facts they know, from our planet and way beyond it. And picked out some of the most mind-bending and wildly interesting ones for you.

#1

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Kids under 5 years will often try to hide from a fire, instead of running.

Firefighters find the bodies.

ziggy-23:
When I was a firefighter we specifically trained for this and in training we were told to always search under beds and behind closets or any tiny space a child could hide during a victim search.
33points

#2

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
The United States Government has a plan for collecting taxes after a nuclear explosion!

Tbh, If a taxman came to my house after a nuke went off, I'd probably just eat him.
27points

Before Reddit threads, before Wikipedia tabs, before Google even… there was a time when looking something up actually required effort. You didn’t just casually spiral into “why do octopuses have three hearts” at 2AM and find the answer while still wrapped in your blanket.

You had to get up, walk to a shelf, pull out a heavy encyclopedia, and hope the answer existed somewhere between A and Z.

Knowledge was curated and limited. And there was a clear sense that information lived in certain places, and belonged to certain authorities.

Even historically, knowledge moved quite slowly and socially.

Before the written forms developed, information was actually passed from person to person, and generation to generation. Known as oral tradition, this was how stories and myths were carried through memory and repetition across cultures.

People learned about animal behavior, weather patterns, food sources, and potential dangers purely through word of mouth. Basically, you had to be in the right place at the right time to pick up information that could quite literally save your life.

#3

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
If your body gets severely low on vitamin c, your old scars will open back up, even surgical scars. It's because even though they seem dormant and healed they are actually constantly regenerating, which requires vitamin c.
25points

#4

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Cats prefer for their food to be far from their water, because in the wild, carcasses in still water may signify infection.
24points

With the internet, all the info in the world is right here at our fingertips. It has become collaborative and is constantly evolving. But most importantly, it has become accessible.

And with online threads and social media posts, knowledge is starting to feel less like research and more like storytelling again.

Like a digital version of people sitting around, swapping the weirdest things they know. Except now the audience is endless and the stories never really stop evolving.

#5

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
An ear infection left untreated can grow and sit for years on end, slowly eating away at your ear canal. If untreated long enough the erosion causes skin cells in your ear unable to escape so they build up into a benign cyst called a cholesteatoma. Left untreated this can grow and affect balance, facial movement and eventually lead to [fatal] infection.

Source: Had a Cholesteatoma removed 3 months ago from untreated ear infections in my early years.
22points

#6

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Marie Curie's body will continue to emit radiation for another millennium and a half.

You have to sign a liability waiver if you want to see anything she owned because she was so radioactive.
21points

#7

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
If you smell fish and there’s no fish around (or people that smell like fish), then your insulation is burning.

Source: 10 years working at a hardware store.
21points

Whether it was ancient storytellers, encyclopedia editors, Wikipedia contributors, or anonymous Reddit users, we all have the same instinct. We like knowing about things that make us wonder. We like passing them on.

And for some reason, we really, really like the weird and strange ones.

There’s actual research behind why this happens.

Studies show that curiosity comes from a gap in what we know. When we come across something that doesn’t quite make sense, our brain wants to fill in the missing piece. It’s strongest when we understand just enough to realize there’s more to learn, but not enough to fully explain it.

Strange facts give us just a slice of information, which is enough to catch our attention, but not enough to feel complete. So we naturally want to know more.

#8

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Banana artificial flavoring is based on a type of banana that went extinct due to low genetic diversity, which is why it tastes completely different from real bananas.
20points

#9

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Babies bounce. their bones are soft enough that instead of thudding, they bounce a little.

retro-orange:

Oh man, this reactivated a memory of my BIL dropping my then 3 month old nephew. The bounce and the silence in the room when he just laid on the carpet face first. Kiddo is 25 now and is fine but I just viscerally remembered the look on everyone’s faces before baby started crying.
19points

#10

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
If your [urine] stinks like movie theater popcorn for longer than a week you should get checked for diabetes.
19points

Once you’ve started digging for info (like reading this listicle), your brain kind of lights up. Studies show that when people are curious, they actually remember information better. They don’t just absorb the info they were curious about in the first place, but even unrelated details they learn at the same time.

We actually spend a huge chunk of our lives doing exactly this.

We’re constantly feeding that need to know more, whether it’s through watching the news or videos, reading articles, or going down internet rabbit holes.

Curiosity is also linked to how we make decisions, because this is what pushes both humans and animals to find different ways to figure things out.

That’s why these strange facts actually matter.

You’ll read one thing, it’ll spark a question, and that question will lead to another. Before you know it, you’re learning without really trying and it doesn’t feel like studying or effort. Yet, your brain is still making connections in the background and retaining info.

#11

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Horned lizards squirt blood from their eyeballs as a defense mechanism.
18points

#12

A group of flamingos is called a Flamboyance.
18points

#13

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
A [deceased] person's fingerprint can't be used to open a laptop-- there needs to be heat behind it.

Source: I'm the IT person in my family, and when my grandfather [passed away], all of the family photos, his will, and all the other important documentation was on his fingerprint-locked laptop. My 16 year old self had to sheepishly hand the laptop to the medical examiner and ask her to see if she could get his fingerprint to open it. It didn't work.
17points

We did some digging to figure out why something random or slightly strange instantly grabs our attention. And why regular, everyday information just doesn’t hit the same way.

Studies show that a big part of it comes down to novelty. Our brains are wired to notice things that are new and unexpected, even if they are slightly weird.

Encountering something new also taps into the brain’s reward system, the same one linked to dopamine (the chemical behind pleasure and motivation).

This dopamine hit makes us feel good for noticing something unusual, and motivates us to explore it more.

Back in the day, that might’ve meant spotting a rare animal in the forest or realizing that a strange cloud formation meant a storm was coming.

Now, it shows up as reading that wombat poop is cube-shaped or that chainsaws were invented for childbirth.

#14

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Your face is a crumple zone. If you fall forward, even really hard, you can avoid a concussion and brain damage though you may have 20 bone breaks in your face and skull.
15points

#15

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Lots of folks have accessory spleens, one or two, size of peas. You could have wee tiny extra spleens and never know.
14points

#16

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
The “snap, crackle, pop” sound that Rice Krispies make in milk is the same sound made by maggots consuming a body.

The human rib cage can compress about two-and-three-quarter inches before it damages internal organs.

Both due to Mary Roach’s book “Stiff”.
14points

Our curiosity developed from survival instincts, and while today it may just be to get little doses of happiness or pass your time, some of these facts can actually save someone’s life.

Because that dopamine hit that you get from coming across new info is actually released in key memory areas of the brain, like the hippocampus. This makes it easier to encode and retain information.

In animal studies, introducing something unfamiliar just before or after a learning task helped mice remember things they otherwise would forget. That tells us novelty can boost memory retention, not just attention.

Studies on humans also show that exposing people to new scenes or experiences, like visiting a new place, improves their ability to remember unrelated facts or words encountered around the same time.

“There are times when people feel they can take in a lot of new information, and other times when they feel their memories are terrible,” says Charan Ranganath, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Davis.

“This suggests that once you light that fire of curiosity, you put the brain in a state that’s more conducive to learning. Once you get this ramp-up of dopamine, the brain becomes more like a sponge that’s ready to soak up whatever is happening.”

#17

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
If someone grabs you by the hair, the best thing you can do is grab their hand to stabilize it and keep it against your head. Then use your thumb to start peeling their fingers starting at the pinky since the pinky is the weakest. Watch out for the attacker’s other hand, use your free hand to block what you can.

For a human bite release, feed the body part into the person’s mouth as much as possible so that they aren’t getting any air through their mouth and then pinch their nose. If that doesn’t work, use your hand to squeeze their cheeks where their jaws meet.
14points

#18

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
The smell of cutting into a human skull is eerily similar to that of opening a fresh bag of Fritos.

You either learn to hate Fritos or get hungry around the smell of skull dust.

anon:
My husband worked in a funeral home and said when they are cremating a body, it smells like Burger King.
13points

#19

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
Blue crabs will eat anything within a few days and will mutilate bones beyond recognition.

jerrythecactus:
This is true for all crabs really. They're bottom feeders and a main component of their diet is the miscellaneous detritus the come across on the seafloor and on shorelines.
13points

Another reason we’re especially drawn to things that feel intense or unsettling is because of “morbid curiosity.”

Studies show people choose to look at negative or even disturbing information, even when they don’t have to.

Experts believe that morbid curiosity helps us understand potential dangers in a safe way.

We’re actually exposing ourselves to threat in a low‑risk setting when we read about true crime, watch scary movies, or look up strange facts online. This lets us mentally rehearse how danger works without actually being in danger.

The Roman gladiatorial games or the spectacle of public executions are prime examples to prove that humans have always been fascinated by the morbid.

#20

69 People Share The Most Bizarre Facts They’ve Ever Learned That Are Actually True
The Pepsi-Cola company once responded to a man who claimed to have found a mouse in his can of mountain dew, stating that due to the high concentration of citric acid, any biological remains left in a can from the canning to consumption time frame would be dissolved before opening.
13points
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