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A scientific fact/tidbit you recently learned that you thought was interesting

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Oh good, let's pee on the thread with political BS, not enough of that going on.
 
Surprised to see so much oil-seed rape grown in Australia when we passed peak-OSR here (UK) about 10 years ago.
 

Very cool indeed, thanks.
And icing not as I thought but just as on our moon...

"Mercury may have water ice at its north and south poles inside deep craters, but only in regions in permanent shadows. In those shadows, it could be cold enough to preserve water ice despite the high temperatures on sunlit parts of the planet."
 
Sumer was unknown to modern history and archeology until about 1870 and now we can read their writing. So, we can read stuff from 4000k+ years ago that nobody knew even existed 200+ years ago. I'm sure most of you have heard of that writing system which was used for about 2000 years, cuneiform.

ETA: There are letters from teachers complaining about kids these days and letters from student complaining about teachers. Scribe school was a thing so, figures.

The earliest Chinese writing we know about appears to be bout 3000+years old on oracle bones. Diviners would carve a question on a bone then bake it to form cracks. They interpreted the cracks as answers to the questions would also be carved on the bones. That script is called oracle bone script.
 
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If you want to see the top of the Mont Blanc, you have to go to the Netherlands,.
Horace Bénédict de Saussure cut it off in 1787 and his son sold it to the Teylers Museum.

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If you want to see the top of the Mont Blanc, you have to go to the Netherlands,.
Horace Bénédict de Saussure cut it off in 1787 and his son sold it to the Teylers Museum.

View attachment 64493
Price?
I suppose I don't care that much, but I don't like it. Its proper place is not in a museum (it's just a rock like any other rock now) but on the peak of that mountain.
ETA: and are they certain that it's actually what it's claimed to be?
 
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