ü
About 400 billion gallons water is used
worldwide each day.
ü
The moon is one million times drier than the
Gobi Desert.
ü
From a distance, Earth would be the brightest of
the 9 planets. This is because sunlight is reflected by the planet's water.
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Earth travels through space at 66,700 miles per
hour.
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Asia Continent is covered 30% of the total earth
land area, but represent 60% of the world's population.
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The world's deadliest recorded earthquake
occurred in 1557 in central China, more than 830,000 people were killed.
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The Persian Gulf is the warmest sea. In the
summer its temperature reaches 35.6 degrees centigrade.
ü
Sunlight can penetrate clean ocean water to a
depth of 240 feet.
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Only 3% water of the earth is fresh, rest 97%
salted. Of that 3%, over 2% is frozen in ice sheets and glaciers. Means less
than 1% fresh water is found in lakes, rivers and underground.
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Louisiana loses about 30 square miles (78 square
kilometers) of land each year to coastal erosion, hurricanes, other natural and
human causes and a thing called subsidence, which means sinking.
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A huge underground river runs underneath the
Nile, with six times more water than the river above.
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The word "Arctic" comes from the
ancient Greek Arktikos, or "country of the great bear." Though the
Greeks had no knowledge of the polar bear, they named the region after the
constellation Ursus Major, the Great Bear, found in the Northern Sky.
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The total surface area of the Earth is 197
million square miles.
ü
Angel Falls in Venezuela is the worlds highest
waterfall, The water of Falls drops 3,212 feet (979 meters).
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About 540 volcanoes on land are known. No one
knows how many undersea volcanoes have erupted through history.
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The deepest depth in the ocean is 36,198 feet
(6.9 miles or 11 kilometers) at the Mariana Trench, in the Pacific Ocean well
south of Japan near the Mariana Islands.
ü
In 1934, a gust of wind reached 371 km/h on
Mount Washington in New Hampshire, USA.
ü
Average 100 lightning strikes occur worldwide
every second.
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The deepest hole ever made by humans is in Kola
Peninsula in Russia, was completed in 1989, creating a hole 12,262 meters (7.6
miles) deep.
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Each winter there are about 1 septillion (1,
000, 000, 000, 000, 000, 000, 000, 000 or a trillion trillion) snow crystals
that drop from the sky.
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Earth is tipped at 23 and 1/2 degrees in orbit.
That axis is what causes our seasons.
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Each Wonder (in 7 wonders) has its own intrigue.
Historian agree that the Pyramids stood the test of time, the Lighthouse is the
only Wonder that has a practical secular use, and the Temple of Artemis was the
most beautiful of all Wonders.
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Groundwater comprises a 30 times greater volume
than all freshwater lakes, and more than 3,000 times what's in the world's
streams and rivers at any given time.
ü
Earth's atmosphere is actually about 80 percent
nitrogen. Most of the rest is oxygen, with tiny amounts of other stuff thrown
in.
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The Angel Falls in Venezuela is the world's
highest waterfall (979 meters / 3212 ft.), three times the size of the Eiffel
Tower.
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The sunrays reached at the earth in 8 minutes
& 3 seconds.
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The Arctic stays black and fiercely cold for
months on end. In the High Arctic, the sun sets in October and does not rise
again until late February.
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The blue whale, Balaenoptera musculus, is the
largest known animal ever to have lived on sea or land. Individuals can reach
more than 110 feet and weigh nearly 200 tons, more than the weight of 50 adult
elephants.
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The industrial complex of Cubatao in Brazil is
known as the Valley of Death because its pollution has destroyed the trees and
rivers nearby.
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The greatest tide change on earth occurs in the
Bay of Fundy. The difference between low tide and high tide can be as great as
54 ft. 6 in. (16.6 meters).
ü
The gravity on Mars is 38% of that found on
Earth. So a 100 pounds person on Earth would weigh 38 pounds on Mars.
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The hottest planet in the solar system is Venus,
with an estimated surface temperature of 864 F (462 C).
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Only 11 percent of the earth's surface is used
to grow food.
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The largest eggs in the world are laid by a
shark.
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One-tenth of the Earth's surface is always under
the cover of ice. And almost 90 per cent of that ice is to be found in the
continent of Antarctica.
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Antarctica is the highest, driest, and coldest
continent on Earth.
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The largest recorded snowflake was 15in wide and
8in thick. It fell in Montana in 1887.
ü
The most dangerous animal in the world is the
common housefly. Because of their habits of visiting animal waste, they
transmit more diseases than any other animal.
ü
Monaco is the Highest Density Country of the
world, 16,205 people per square k.m. live in Monaco.
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Earth's oceans are an average of 2 Miles deep
ü
American Roy Sullivan has been struck by
lighting a record seven times.
ü
Rain has never been recorded in some parts of
the Atacama Desert in Chile.
ü
The age of the earth is Loudly proclaimed by the
scientific establishment of evolution believers and the mass media as being
around 4.6 billion years old.
ü
The Earth is the densest major body in the solar
system.
ü
The people who live on Tristan da Cunha are over
2,000km (about 1,300 miles) from their nearest neighbours on the island of St.
Helena. That's nearly as far as Moscow is from London.
ü
The temperature of Earth increases about 36
degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celsius) for every kilometer (about 0.62 miles)
you go down.
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The water that falls on a single acre of land
during one inch of rainfall, it would weigh 113 tons that is 226,000 pounds.
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Life began in the seas 3.1 billion to 3.4
billion years ago. Land dwellers appeared 400 million years ago, a relatively
recent point in the geologic time line.
ü
The Peregrine Falcon around 200mph (320 km/h) is
the fastest bird on the planet, the top speed recorded is 242.3mph (390 km/h).
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The flower with the world's largest bloom is the
Rafflesia arnoldii. This rare flower is found in the rainforests of Indonesia.
It can grow to be 3 feet across and weigh up to 15 pounds.
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About 70% of the world's fresh water is stored
as glacial ice.
ü
Blue whales are found throughout the world's
oceans, the lifespan is estimated to be 80 years & population is between
1300 & 2000 only, its dangerously low.
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The distance from the surface of Earth to the
center is about 3,963 miles (6,378 kilometers).
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The coldest temperature ever measured on Earth
was -129 Fahrenheit (-89 Celsius) at Vostok, Antarctica, on July 21, 1983.
ü
A 1960 Chilean earthquake was the strongest
earthquake in recent times, which occurred off the coast, had a magnitude of
9.6 and broke a fault more than 1000 miles (1600 kilometers) long.
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There is no land at all at the North Pole, only
ice on top of sea. The Arctic Ocean has about 12 million sq km of floating ice
and has the coldest winter temperature of -34 degrees centigrade.
ü
Total fertility rate of the world is 2.59
children born/woman. Niger is 7.46 (highest), India is 2.73, US is 2.09 &
Hong Kong is 0.95 only (Lowest).
ü
About 20 to 30 volcanoes erupt each year, mostly
under the sea.
ü
Continents are typically defined as landmasses
made of low-density rock that essentially floats on the molten material below.
Greenland fits this description.
ü
Baikal Lake in Russian Fed. is the deepest lake
(5315 ft) in the world.
ü
Lake Bosumtwi in Ghana formed in a hollow made
by a meteorite.
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The largest meteorite crater in the world is in
Winslow, Arizona. It is 4,150 feet across and 150 feet deep.
ü
El Azizia in Libya recorded a temperature of 136
degrees Fahrenheit (57.8 Celsius) on Sept. 13, 1922 - the hottest ever
measured.
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The Antarctic ice sheet is 3-4 km thick, covers
13 million sq km and has temperatures as low as -70 degrees centigrade.
ü
The world's windiest place is Commonwealth Bay,
Antartica with winds regularly exceeding 150 miles per hour.
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The highest temperature produced in a laboratory
was 920,000,000 F (511,000,000 C) at the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor in
Princeton, NJ, USA.
ü
Earth is the only planet on which water can
exist in liquid form on the surface.
ü
At least 1,000 million grams, or roughly 1,000
tons of material (dust) enters the atmosphere every year and makes its way to
Earths surface.
ü
Lake Baikal is about 20 million years old and
contains 20 percent of Earth's fresh liquid water.
ü
Laika (dog) became the world's first space
traveler. Russian scientists sent the small animal aloft in an artificial earth
satellite in 1957.
ü
Total fertility rate of the world is 2.59
children born/woman.
ü
The Pacific Ocean has an average depth of 2.4
miles (3.9 kilometers).
ü
Nearly 70 percent of the Earth's fresh-water
supply is locked up in the icecaps of Antarctica and Greenland. The remaining
fresh-water supply exists in the atmosphere, streams, lakes, or groundwater and
accounts for a mere 1 percent of the Earth's total.
ü
The lowest dry point on earth is the Dead Sea in
the Middle East is about 1300 feet (400 meters) below sea level.
ü
The origin of the word "volcano" is
derives from Vulcan, the Roman god of fire.
ü
There are between 100,000,000,000 and
1,000,000,000,000 stars in a normal galaxy.
ü
Chile (Africa) is the driest place on Earth,
gets just 0.03 inches (0.76 millimeters) of rain per year.
ü
Tibet is the highest country in the world. Its
average height above sea level is 4500 meters.
ü
The Largest Ocean of the World is the Pacific
Ocean (155,557,000 sq km), It covers nearly one-third of the Earth's surface.
ü
In 1783 an Icelandic eruption threw up enough
dust to temporarily block out the sun over Europe.
ü
The oceans contain 99 percent of the living
space on the planet.
ü
The EARTH has over 1,200,000 species of animals,
300,000 species of plants & 100,000 other species.
ü
Global Positioning System (GPS) is the only
system today that can show your exact position on the Earth anytime, in any weather,
no matter where you are!
ü
Of the more than 600 million school-age children
in the developing world, 120 million primary school-age children are not in
school, 53 percent are girls.
ü
Mars days are 24 hours and 37 minutes long,
compared to 23 hours, 56 minutes on Earth.
ü
About one-third surface of the Earth's land is
desert.
ü
The warmest sea in the world is the Red Sea,
where temperatures range from 68 degrees to 87.8 degrees F depending upon which
part you measure.
ü
Shanghai, China is the largest city by
population (13.3 million) in the world.
ü
The temperature of Earth near the center, its
thought to be at least 7,000 degrees Fahrenheit (3,870 Celsius).
ü
The World's largest hot desert is the Sahara in
North Africa, at over 9,000,000 km, it is almost as large as the United States.
ü
Earth is referred to as the BLUE PLANET. Because
from space, the oceans combined with our atmosphere make our planet look blue.
ü
The Skylab astronauts grew 1.5 - 2.25 inches
(3.8 - 5.7 centimeters) due to spinal lengthening and straightening as a result
of zero gravity.
ü
Coniferous forest belt supplies most of the
world's requirement of newsprint.
ü
Mars has two satellites, Phobos and Deimos. The
Earth has only one natural satellite, but it's the Moon.
ü
The Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf are
connected by the Hormuz Strait.
ü
The eruption of Tambora volcano is the world's
deadliest Volcano in Indonesia in 1815 is estimated to have killed 90,000
people.
ü
Luxembourg is the richest country of the world,
the gross national product (GNP) of Luxembourg is $45,360.
ü
Some of the oldest mountains in the world are
the Highlands in Scotland . They are estimated to be about 400 million years
old.
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The saltiest sea in the world is the Red Sea
with 41 parts of salt per 1,000 parts of water.
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The total water supply of the world is 326
million cubic miles (1 cubic mile of water equals more than 1 trillion
gallons).
ü
Birth Rate of Hong Kong is the lowest
(7.29/1000) & Niger is highest (50.73/1000).
ü
The Sarawak Chamber in Malaysia is the largest
cave in the world is 2300 feet (701 meters) long, 1300 feet (400 meters) wide,
and more than 230 feet (70 meters) high.
ü
Caspian Sea, Asia-Europe is the major lake
(371,000 sq km) in the world.
ü
The White Sea, in Russia, has the lowest
temperature, only -2 degrees centigrade.
ü
The Sahara Desert in northern Africa is more
than 23 times the size of southern California's Mojave Desert.
ü
The Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii is the largest
volcanoon on Earth. It rises more than 50,000 feet (9.5 miles or 15.2
kilometers) above its base, which sits under the surface of the sea.
ü
Australia, (7,617.930 sq km) is widely
considered part of a continental landmass, not officially an island. But
without doubt it is the largest island on the planet, and when combined with
Oceania, the smallest continent on Earth.
ü
Northern Mariana Islands is only the country
where death rate (2.29/1000) is lowest in the world.
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The Nile River in Africa is the longest river
(6,825 kilometers) of the earth.
ü
The dormant volcano Mauna Kea (on the Big Island
of Hawaii) could be considered the tallest mountain in the world. If you
measure it from its base in the Hawaiian Trough (3,300 fathoms deep) to its
summit of 13,796 feet, it reaches a height of 33,476 feet.
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The top three countries have the greatest number
of historically active volcanoes are Indonesia, Japan, and the United States in
descending order of activity.
ü
Mount Everest 8850 meter (29035 ft) Nepal/China
is the tallest mountain.
ü
United Arab Emirates is only the country where
death rate 2.11/1000 (deaths/1,000 population) is lowest (2009 est.) in the
world.
ü
Tremendous erosion at the base of Niagara Falls
(USA) undermines the shale cliffs and as a result the falls have receded
approximately 7 miles over the last 10,000 years.
ü
Scientists estimate that more than
three-quarters of Earth's surface is of volcanic origin, that is, rocks either
erupted by volcanoes or molten rock.
ü
English is the second most spoken language
(Native speakers 512 million) & the first is Chinese Mandarin (more then 1
billion speakers).
ü
Most earthquakes are triggered less than 50
miles (80 kilometers) from the surface of the Earth.
ü
Water-meal or Wolffia globosa is the smallest
flower in the world, its contains some 38 species of the smallest and simplest
flowering plants.
ü
The red planet "Mars" takes 687
Earth-days to go around the Sun, compared to 365 days for Earth.
ü
The coldest seas are found near the poles such
as the Greenland, Barents, Beaufort, Kara, Laptev & East Siberian Seas
found near the north pole & Weddell & Ross Seas found in the south
poles. The Baltic Sea is also considered one of the coldest seas.
ü
The Antarctic Ice Sheet holds nearly 90 percent
of the world's ice and 70 percent of its fresh water. If the entire ice sheet
were to melt, sea level would rise by nearly 220 feet.
ü
The fastest 'regular' wind that's widely agreed
upon was 231 mph (372 kph), recorded at Mount Washington, New Hampshire, on
April 12, 1934.
ü
The world's largest island is Greenland, it covers
840,000 square miles (2,176,000 square kilometers).
ü
In January and February, the average temperature
in the high Arctic is -29 F.
ü
Lloro, Colombia is the wettest place on Earth,
averages 523.6 inches of rainfall a year, or more than 40 feet (13 meters).
That's about 10 times more than fairly wet major cities in Europe or the United
States.
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The Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean, covers
64 million square miles (165 million square kilometers). It is more than two
times the size of the Atlantic.
ü
Lake Mead is the largest man-made lake and
reservoir in the United States. Formed by water impounded by Hoover Dam, it
extends 110 mi (180 km) behind the dam, holding approximately 28.5 million acre
feet (35 km³) of water.
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