[Deleted User] wrote: » A starquake on a neutron star could cause a mass extinction on Earth if it happened within 10 light years of us. It would last milliseconds and the movement within the star would be measured in millimeters, yet it would release thousands of year's worth of our sun's energy.
joeguevara wrote: » Death toll of 20 million. Considering a world population of 5-6 billion at the time doesn’t put a dent. More soldiers died in the First World War.
Ineedaname wrote: » We were actually hit by one in 2004. It came from a neutron star 50,000 light years away. It was so powerful it blinded a satellite specifically designed to detect these events despite it being pointed in the opposite direction. It even partially ionized the earths atmosphere causing it to ring like a bell.
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » The world population didn’t hit 5-6B until the 90s. I’m surprised it was as high as in 1.2B in 1850 actually
fred funk }{ wrote: » World population was 1.2 b in 1850.
joeguevara wrote: » fair play. I was way way way off. But still no where near 1/12 of the worlds population.
Deleted User wrote: » A starquake on a neutron star could cause a mass extinction on Earth if it happened within 10 light years of us. It would last milliseconds and the movement within the star would be measured in millimeters, yet it would release thousands of year's worth of our sun's energy.
cbreeze wrote: » giraffes are the only mammals who can't swim
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » The Sicilian Mafia developed out of the uneasy development of modern Italy. They wanted to be indepedent, and took war against the State. They aligned their organisation along the same lines as a Roman Legion. Man of Honour,a made man , a soldato, soldier. A Caporegime, A Capo, a Captain. A Capo controls a crew of soldiers. The three man ruling administration The Consiglere, the advisor, the counseler to the boss. Underboss. Second in command and heir to the top position. Don or Boss the leader of the organisation.
Deleted User wrote: » Hippos can't swim
Wossack wrote: » speaking of giraffes - their name is relatively new, only being coined in the 1600s. Before that they were called camelopards, a conjunction of camel and leopard
Oldtree wrote: » Apart from trees forming symbiotic relationships with local mycorrhizal fungi, tree seeds can carry latent fungi that only "emerge" later from the mature tree, triggered by the demise of the tree. This is part of a natural symbiotic recycling process rather than an infection by 'bad' fungi. Now I cannot pin down where I learned this, but this article goes some way to supporting the idea:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1754504810000061
New Home wrote: » The comments are very interesting!
Gloomtastic! wrote: » From the Cool Pictures thread.......
New Home wrote: » There's a type of cotton fabric so fine and smooth it's called something like "egg skin", because it resembles the "skin" that protects the egg under the shell (you can see it better when you peel a hard boiled egg).
Anders Shy Aircraft wrote: » They should call it "protective protein membrane" so.
gw80 wrote: » Dont know if its been posted already but the word slang is short for short language, seen it on facebook so may or may not be true.