BaZmO* wrote: » This post is the 10,000th post
Speedsie wrote: » Malaria is a terrible disease. The last person to die from malaria contacted in Ireland (in Cork I think) was a certain Mr O Cromwell in the 17th century. I think the last major outbreak of malaria was in the 19th century, also in Cork...
Widdershins wrote: » An estimated that half of the number of people who ever lived have been killed by Malaria. The infection rate in some parts of Africa like Gabon is 200%...because some people contract Malaria twice a year...and Malaria was originally introduced by Europeans.
Chancer3001 wrote: » Even still surely it hasnt killed half the people that ever lived?
Widdershins wrote: » Incidentally we still have isolated incidents of bubonic plague in the West. Apparently its much more curable now.
Widdershins wrote: » Octopuses have blue blood, no bones, and three hearts.
mzungu wrote: » Sir Hugh Beaver, the Managing Director of the Guinness Brewery, decided to set up the Guinness Book of World Records after attempting to settle an argument over whether golden plover or the red grouse is the fastest game bird in Europe. He found that the answer to this was hard to find in reference books. So, in order to settle these kinds of trivial arguments the Guinness Book of World Records was born in 1955.
LaFuton wrote: » octopi?
Adyx wrote: » Nope. Octopuses is correct.
roosterman71 wrote: » Maybe that lad in the Matrix film all those years ago was right - humans are like a virus.
Buford T. Justice VI wrote: » Head into the link below and scroll down to see some species and how deep they're found. And continue right down to the deepest parts of the oceans.https://neal.fun/deep-sea/
ohnonotgmail wrote: » As Bill Hicks described the human race, a virus with shoes.
Chase Embarrassed Pod wrote: » PrincePhilip remarked (in 1988): "In the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus, to contribute something to solving overpopulation". Charming.
In 1517 Laurent Vital described this distinctive Irish hair style thus: ‘for they (Irish men) were shorn and shaved one palm above the ears, so that only the tops of their heads were covered with hair. But on the forehead they leave about a palm of hair to grow down to their eyebrows like a tuft of hair which one leaves hanging on horses between the two eyes’[iii]. Seen as a particularly Irish haircut it was despised by the English establishment and attempts were made to outlaw it in 1537[iv] and again in the 1570s[v]. However, it remained persistently popular and appears to have been worn as badge of honour amongst Irish kerns (soldiers).