The 25 Most Important Questions in the History of the Universe

People magazine has its 50 Most Beautiful People ... Time has a Person of the Year ... And mental_floss magazine - besides having tons of fascinating, cool, and juicy stories, anecdotes, and trivia - now has something that trumps 'em both:

The 25 Most Important Questions
in the History of the Universe.

Hard questions that matter, like "can a pregnant woman drive in the carpool lane?" or "how can I win at that ultra-important-corporate-decision-making- process, rock-paper-scissor?" and of course, "is turkey a country or a bird first?". Wait, is it *really* a natural bird? Never mind - don't answer that.

The folks at mental_floss were friendly enough to let us feature their stuff - something that will become a regular feature here at Neatorama (so be kind to them and visit their brand new and very chic blog, ok?). The text is verbatim from the articles, although I did add links, pics, videos and probably a couple of typos.

Let's go to the list, already:

1. What Makes No. 2 Pencils So Darn Special?

Little. Yellow. Identical. The No. 2 is definitely No. 1 in the pencil market. It's a staple in schools and workplaces everywhere, and the required writing utensil for Scantron® tests across the globe. But is it really that great of a pencil? You bet your bippy.

No. 2's use medium weight graphite, which makes them the ideal pencils for general writing. 18th-century French pencil maker Nicolas-Jacques Conté created the number system based on a pencil's hardness (the higher the number, the harder the graphite), and we've been using it ever since.

But let's not forget the other numbers of pencils out there. No. 1's are made with soft graphite and tend to smudge, and are often used to record bowling scores. No. 3's and above indicate harder pencils that are most often used for drafting, when you need a sharp, strong point.

2. Who's That AOL Guy Who Eerily Knows When You've Got Mail?

Meet Elwood Edwards, the man behind the message. Approximately 63 million times a day, Edwards' voice greets AOL customers to let them know "you've got mail."

Edwards' career as a disembodied cyber presence stretches back to 1989 when his wife overheard her boss at Quantum Computer Services discussing adding a voice to its online service, Q-Link. At the time, Elwood did voice-overs for radio and television, so his wife suggested him for the company's new program. Not long after, Quantum changed its name to America Online and premiered AOL 1.0, with Elwood speaking four phrases: "Welcome," "You've got mail," "File's done," and "Goodbye." Through AOL's numerous upgrades, one thing has remained the same: Elwood Edwards.

Today, his voice is so well known that he's created a website where fans can order their own custom phrases. The site also includes pictures of Edwards, just in case you're looking to put a face with that friendly voice you love so much.

3. Where Does Nougat Come From?

Like falafel and the number "0," nougat is a product of Middle Eastern genius. Originally made from a mixture of honey, nuts, and spices, the basic recipe was transplanted to Greece where it lost the spices and gained the name "nugo."

Later cultural exchanges brought the treat to France, where it became "nougat," and the recipe switched from calling for ground walnuts to ground almonds. In 1650, the French made another change for the better, adding beaten egg whites and creating the fluffier, modern nougat texture. The first commercial nougat factory opened in Montelimar, France, in the late 18th century, and today, the area is renowned for its nougat, with about a dozen manufacturers producing the sugary treat.

As for its ugly American cousin - the nougat you're probably familiar with from candy bars - it's not "true nougat." The imitation stuff is chewier, less almond-y, and contains enough artificial preservatives to make a French candy-maker swoon.

4. Is There One Move That's More Likely to Win a Game of Rock-Paper-Scissors?

To answer this question, we turned to the archives of the World Rock-Paper-Scissors Society (seriously!), where we found that RPS players rely on strategy, not probability, to win. From the playground to the annual International World RPS Tournament (really, people, we're not kidding), outwitting your opponent is job No. 1 for serious competitors.

According to the Society, one way to guess what hand someone will throw out is to know how many rounds they've won so far. Players who are in the lead will often use scissors, because it's believed to symbolize aggression, while paper is used for a more subtle attack. Rock is usually a last resort, when players feel their strategies are failing. There are also techniques you can use to mask your move, such as cloaking, in which players will pretend to throw rock and then stick out two fingers at the last second to make scissors. In addition, the true professionals (who do exist) will use sets of three moves, called "gambits," to help them make their moves out of strategy, not reaction.

But that's not all. The Society also keeps track of how common moves are, particularly as they relate to mentions of RPS in pop culture. For instance, after "The Simpsons" episode where Bart beats Lisa with rock and thinks to himself "Good old rock, nothing beats it," the Society recorded a .3 percent upswing in the use of rock.

But if you're gonna play, be prepared to pay; RPS can be a dangerous sport. In the late 1980's, Kenyan Mustafa Nwenge lost a match and the use of a finger when an overzealous opponent "cut his paper" a little too hard and crushed Nwenge's finger ligaments.

See also: Rock Paper Scissors on Steroids


This is a Vargo titanium spork: spoon, fork, can opener, and bottle openers all in one!

5. Which Came First, the Can Opener or the Can?

While the mental_floss staff is still working round the clock to figure out that blasted chicken/egg question, this one we can definitely answer.

In 1810, a British merchant named Peter Durand patented the tin can, making it possible for sterilized food to be preserved more effectively than was possible with breakable containers. The can were especially useful for long ocean voyages, where glass bottles were prone to breakage, and soon the British Navy was dining on canned veggies and meat.

So far, so good. But what Durand (and everybody else for that matter) forgot to invent was a way to open the cans. For almost 50 years, getting into your pork 'n' beans required the use of a hammer and a chisel. The first can opener was patented by American inventor Ezra Warner in 1858, but even that wasn't particularly convenient. These early openers were stationed at the grocery store, and clerks did the honors. It wasn't until 1870 that the first home can openers made an appearance.

6. How Does a Word Become a Curse Word?

Our parents are totally going to ground us for talking about this, but if you must know, a "curse" was originally just a bad type of prayer. Thus, the first curse word was likely "damn," as in asking God to damn someone to Hell, which was considered taboo because of the religious power it wielded.

Condemning people to an eternity of suffering isn't something to let everyone just go around doing on a daily basis, so the government stepped in, leading to the first censorship laws. Among the first victims was William Shakespeare, whose works were considered quite racy for their time, and not just because he sent his fair share of characters to Hades. The Bard's plays were littered with sexual innuendo, and eventually, these types of references became swear words as well.

Depending on what the sexual mores of the current generation were, formerly innocuous words could suddenly become unfit for polite company. The Victorians, for instance, instituted the practice of referring to the thigh meat on a chicken as "dark meat" because saying the word "leg" or "thigh" at dinner could be enough to give your hostess a case of the vapors.

And in the 17th century, the "c-word" that formerly referred to a certain barnyard fowl took on another, er, more inappropriate meaning, leading to the invention of words like "rooster" and "weathervane" to keep the newly dirty word from crossing genteel lips.

Sometimes these avoidance tactics went a little too far, though. Case in point: the 1952-53 season of "I Love Lucy," during which, despite the star's stomach being about the size of the Superdome, censors prevented the show's writers from even once mentioning the word "pregnant."

See also: Maledicta Journal, a scholarly journal dedicated to bad, bad words, published by Reinhold Aman [wiki] (a colorful character himself!).

7. Can a Pregnant Woman Drive in the Carpool Lane?

Expectant mothers, start your engines! In 1987, a pregnant California woman was ticketed for driving "by herself" in the carpool lane. Sure, the citation was only for $52, but she sued anyway, contending that her 5-month-old fetus constituted a second person.

Lo and behold, the jury agreed with her, despite the prosecution's argument that women could then just stuff pillows up their dresses to drive "carpool" on California's freeways.

But as it turns out, the California Highway Patrol took care of that concern, brushing off the case as a bunch of hooey. Verdict or not, officers said they would continue to ticket solo drivers, even if they claimed to be pregnant.

See also: Pregnant mom driving in the carpool lane? Not in Arizona, you won't | Dummies won't work, either!

8. Why Do Battery Letters Skip from A to C? Was There Ever a B-Cell Battery?

Battery letter designations are based on the size of the battery: for common sizes, A is the smallest, and D is the largest. By the same logic, AA batteries are larger than AAA. Unfortunately for B batteries, it's not the size that counts. You never see B batteries around because they aren't very useful. The size never caught on in products made for consumers, so stores didn't carry them, and the cycle continued. They are sold, but only in Europe, where they're used primarily to power bicycle lamps.

9. What Does McDonald's Have in Common with the CIA?

"Clowns wanted! We are looking for clowns to fit high profile, permanent positions. Must be wiling to relocate."

If this ad seems a little peculiar, it's because McDonald's execs share an intense policy of employee secrecy with their less-delicious counterparts over at the Central Intelligence Agency. Clowns who portray the company mascot, Ronald McDonald, are strictly forbidden from disclosing their identities.

It's also taboo for two (costumed) Ronalds to be in the same place at the same time. In fact, the only time they get together is at the biennial Ronald McDonald Convention, which, as you might imagine, is also very top-secret.

All of this helps keep up the image that Ronald, the second most recognizable figure worldwide after Santa, is a single, magical character. There are, of course, many Ronalds - an estimate 250 of the clowns worldwide, in fact. Their average income is about $40,000 a year, but the busiest clowns can bring in as much as $100,000. The Ronald McDonald who appears in the company's television commercials earns a salary of more than $300,000 and must be booked a year in advance. We could tell you who he is, but then, of course, we'd have to kill you.

See also: In Japan, forget Ronald and say hello to McHottie! Ronald McDonald: Chief Happiness Officer [wiki]

10. Why Does Hawaii Have Interstate Highways?

While we'd like to believe Hawaii's Interstate system exists for the sole purpose of annoying George Carlin, the name is actually a misnomer. Not all Interstates physically go from one state to another; the name merely implies that the roads receive federal funding.

The three Hawaii Interstates (H1, H2, and H3) became Interstates as part of The Dwight D. Eisenhower System of Interstate and National Defense Highways to protect the U.S. from a Soviet invasion by making it easier to get supplies from one military base to another.

11. Why Do Most Snooze Buttons Only Give You Nine More Minutes of Sleep?

By the time the snooze feature was added in the 1950's, the innards of alarm clocks had long been standardized.

This meant that the teeth on the snooze gear had to mesh with the existing gear configuration, leaving engineers with a single choice: They could set the snooze for either a little more than nine minutes, or a little more than 10 minutes.

Reports indicated that 10 minutes was too long, since it allowed people to fall back into a "deep" sleep, so clock makers chose the nine-minute gear, believing people would wake up easier and happier after a shorter snooze. We'd tend to disagree with that logic, but, then we must be in the lazy minority.

Although today's digital clocks can be programmed to have a snooze of any length, most stick with nine minutes because that's what consumers expect.

See also: Puzzle Alarm Clock

12. Why Do We Call Them Grandfather Clocks?

Grandfather clocks are grandfather clocks for much the same reason M.C. Hammer pants are M.C. Hammer pants: It's all about the pop music.

In 1875, American songwriter Henry Work checked in for a stay at the George Hotel in North Yorkshire, England. In the lobby was a large pendulum clock that had belonged to the inn's pervious owners, both deceased. The clock was said to have stopped dead - to the minute - on the day the last surviving owner died.

Work thought this was a great story and went on to fictionalize it in a song called "My Grandfather's Clock [wiki]." The lyrics centered around a clock that was "taller by half than the old man himself" and that "stopped short never to go again" when the grandfather died. It was, obviously, a runaway hit. Work sold over a million copies in sheet music, and eventually, the term "grandfather clock" became attached to the style of clock that inspired the song.

See also: Eric Harshbarger's Lego Grandfather Clock

13. Was Turkey a Bird or a Country First?

And the award goes to: Turkey-the-country! Turns out, turkey-the-bird is native to North America and acquired its name when the Spanish brought it from Mexico to Europe. When the bird made its debut in England, it was mistaken for a Guinea Hen, a common fowl regularly imported from Africa by Turks. Then the English, demonstrating that they are the real turkeys in this story, named the bird after its supposed importers.


Turkey Target found at Airhog

14. How Much Wood Would a Woodchuck Chuck if a Woodchuck Could Chuck Wood?

Probably none. Woodchucks aren't particularly tree-oriented, and while they can climb to find food, they prefer being on the ground.

In fact, they got the name "woodchuck" from British trappers who couldn't quite wrap their tongues around the Cree Indian name "wuchak." More commonly (and accurately) known as groundhogs, these animals are closely related to squirrels, marmots, and prairie dogs, with which they share an affinity for burrowing.

And actually, a burrowing woodchuck can chuck dirt, in the form of tunnels that can reach five feet deep and as much as 35 feet in length. So, based on that number, New York State wildlife expert Richard Thomas calculated that if a woodchuck could chuck wood, he could chuck as much as 700 pounds of the stuff.

15. We Know Nothing Better Has Come Along Since then, But Who Invented Sliced Bread Anyway?

It may get a lot of credit now, but at the time of its debut in 1928, sliced bread received less-than-rave reviews.

Baker and inventor Otto Frederick Rohwedder had spent 15 years perfecting his bread slicer (finally settling on one that wrapped the sliced bread to hold it together as opposed to the hat pins he'd tried earlier), but consumers weren't quick to convert. People found the sliced bread strange and senseless. It wasn't until the advent of Wonder Bread, and the collective realization that sliced bread worked better in the toaster, that Rohwedder's invention really took off.

By World War II, the military was using sliced bread to serve peanut butter & jelly sandwiches as part of soldiers' rations. Previously uncommon, the PB&J gained a loyal following among servicemen, who kept making the sandwich, sliced bread and all, after they came back to the home front.

Neatorama note: Sliced Bread photoshop job by Nana, at the always amusing Worth1000 (Mucho Macho 2)

16. Why Is It Called "Blackmail?"

The first blackmailers were Scottish landlords who exploited farmers by making them pay rent in livestock or services if they couldn't pay in cash. The goods they had to hand over were usually worth more than the rent owned, and the landlords didn't make change.

Around the same time, local chieftains started going after the same farmers with the kind of scheme the mafia usually refers to as "selling insurance." They made an offer the farmers couldn't refuse: pay a fee for protection. If the farmers didn't pay, then the chieftains would unfortunately be unable to prevent ruffians from destroying crops and sacking property.

The Scottish farmers called both nefarious deals "black" because they associated that color with evil, and because both payments were made in goods rather than silver coins (called "white money"). As for the "mail" part, it doesn't refer to the postal system. That "mail" comes from the German word for "pouch." The "mail" in blackmail is related to the Old Norse word for "payment" or "agreement."

Neatorama's note: The photo above is of Monty Python's skit Blackmail [wiki], where "Michael Palin plays a smarmy television game show host who extorts money from his viewers by threatening to reveal embarrassing or illegal facts about them. One game is "Stop the film," where a scandalous film is played until a phone call is received, and the amount of money needed increases the longer the subject waits."

17. Is It Possible to Own Property on the Moon?

That depends on what your definition of is, is. According to the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, countries can't own lunar real state. However, the Treaty doesn't say anything about the rights of individuals to claim land.

Enter Dennis Hope, a California entrepreneur / ventriloquist who'd exploited the loophole to its fullest. In 1980, Hope announced his ownership to the moon (and, incidentally, the rest of the solar system) and promptly started selling off plots through his company, Lunar Embassy.

Space-faring nations vehemently denied the legality of Hope's business, pointing to the 1979 Moon Treaty, which forbids individual interstellar land investment. Finding yet another loophole, Hope countered by noting that none of the space nations ever actually signed that treaty after the U.S. and Russia both refused.

But Moon Treaty or not, an individual can still only own land through the jurisdiction of his or her home country, and if nations can't own it, then people can't own land through them.

Tenuous as his argument is, Hope has still managed to inspire some serious investors. To date, the Lunar Embassy has made more than $1.6 million. If you're interested, plots go for as little as $30, but don't spend all your money on moon land: mental_floss has some contacts with beautiful oceanfront lots in Arizona and we'd love to get you in on the ground floor.

See also: Space Article | Google Moon

18. Why Can't You Tickle yourself?

Much to the dismay of wacky masochist everywhere, the human brain is wired against self-tickling. Because the brain controls movement, it knows what your hand is going to do before you do it. Thus it anticipates the exact force, location, and speed of the tickle and uses that information to desensitize you to your own roving hands.

So why do we have a tickle response anyway? Turns out, it's a defense reaction meant to alert our cave-dwelling ancestors to creepy crawlies that didn't know their place, and the uncontrollable laughing fit that goes along with it is actually a panic response.

Even if you know someone else is about to go for your rib cage, it's hard to turn the response off because a) your brain can't anticipate exactly how and where they'll tickle you and b) knowing someone is about to tickle you is usually enough to keep those panic receptors open and ready to go.

See also: Tickle Salon and Tickle Robot | Andre Stubbe and Markus Lerner's ticklish robot | for something completely different: trout tickling [wiki], and who can forget: Tickle Me Elmo [wiki]

19. Human Meat Isn't Appetizing, But is It Healthy?

You are what you eat. So it stands to reason that if you're a cannibal, and you eat a diseased, dead guy, you're going to become a diseased, dead guy.

But the cannibalistic Fore people of New Guinea found that out the hard way. For most of the 20th century, the Fore were plagued with a disease called Kuru [wiki], also known as the laughing death. Kuru, a relative of mad cow disease, paralyzes its victims and cause dementia by turning the brain into something resembling Swiss cheese - literally creating holes in the brain.

Fascinated by what he though was a genetic disorder, scientist Daniel Carleton Gajdusek [wiki] traveled to New Guinea in 1957 to study the Fore. While there, he discovered that women made up the vast majority of Kuru victims. He also noticed that women and children were the ones ceremonially eating the brains and intestines of dead relatives. Putting two and two together, Gajdusek deduced that the Fore were ingesting the prions, or misshapen proteins, that caused the disease.

Gajdusek received a Nobel Prize for his work, and today, cannibalism and Kuru are all but wiped out in New Guinea.

See also: University of Utah's Prions:On the Trail of Killer Proteins

20. Can You Actually Sense Weather with an Injured body Part?

There was a time when scientists would walk barefoot, through the snow, uphill both ways, just to ridicule you for believing that sensing weather with the body was anything but an old wives' tale.

Today, many will still scoff at the idea, but maybe just in an email. In 1961, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School conducted a series of tests that proved changes in climate could affect your health, especially if you suffered from arthritis.

It works like this: When a storm is approaching, the barometric pressure of the air falls, which can cause an inflammation around a bone injury to swell and stretch, irritating the nerves around the joint and causing a lot of pain.

The Pennsylvania scientists tested their theory on 12 volunteers in a climate-controlled chamber, and found that those who had arthritis experienced more pain when the air pressure was lower, thus suggesting that they could sense an approaching storm.

21. Why Won't Pineapple and Jell-O® Be Friends?

If Jell-O® ads and 1950's cookbooks are to be believed, you can mix almost anything with gelatin and have it come out tasty. Ham? Absolutely. Carrots? Sure thing. Tomato soup? M'm, m'm, good.

The only ingredient that seems to be taboo is one that actually sounds delicious: fresh pineapple. Unfortunately, the tropical treat works like kryptonite on Jell-O® because it contains an enzyme called bromelain, which prevents gelatin from forming into a solid.

But fret not, fruit salad mold fans: canned pineapple doesn't contain bromelain. The canning process heats the pineapple to a temperature sufficient to break the enzyme down, making it oh-so Jell-O® friendly.

See also: Elizabeth Hickok's San Francisco in Jell-O.

22. What are Sea-Monkeys®, Anyway?

Ah, Sea-Monkeys®. You know 'em; you love 'em; you're totally confused by them. Well, consider he monkey mystery solved. Turns out, they're Artemia salinas, or brine shrimp.

In the 1960's, inventor Harold von Braunhut [wiki] discovered that the eggs of these shrimp lie dormant in salt flats waiting for the right conditions before they spring to life, so he started experimenting with them for his toy product, Instant-Life. But later, he changed the name (and struck pop culture gold) after a colleague heard him call the creatures his "cute little sea monkeys."

The shrimp became popular because of their ability to "come back to life" after being stored dry on a shelf, but hey weren't so popular after children discovered that the shrimp only had a life span of about a month.

Over the years, however, Von Braunhut has managed to breed better Sea-Monkeys®. Today's comic book ads now promise that they will live up to two years. Von Braunhut, who passed away in 2003, was also the man responsible for X-Ray Specs, and the late 1980s' hermit crab craze.

23. How Many Pounds of Chimpanzee are Needed to Defeat the Average Human?

In 1924, the Bronx Zoo tested the relative strength of a 165-pound man against a 165-pound chimpanzee. Using a dynamometer, which measures strength by the force of a pull on a spring, the man was able to pull 210 pounds. The chimp pulled almost 900. The lesson: Don't mess with the apes. Pound for pound, chimpanzees are about five times stronger than humans. In fact, a human is no match for a chimpanzee, regardless of its age or sex. In the same Bronx experiment, a 135-pound female chimp pulled a whopping 1,260 pounds. Scientists also estimate that, at the tender age of five, young chimpanzees are already stronger than adult humans.

See also: Karate Chimp [YouTube link for video above] | Smoking Chimp | Chimp Playing Ms. Pac-Man | Chimp vs. Navy Seal Obstacle Race [video]

24. Why are Grape-Nuts® Neither Grapes Nor Nuts?

Post Company founder Charles W. Post might have been good at creating popular cereals, but he wasn't the best at naming them.

One of his first breakfast treats, Post Toasties, was originally known by the more, er, zealous name, Elijah's Manna.

And then there's the misleading Grape-Nuts®, which Charles named after a key ingredient in the cereal called maltose, which tasted like nuts and, at the time, was known as "grape sugar." Hence, Grape-Nuts.

It may sound like false advertising, but it's not. Post would likely be protected from such allegations by that precious little hyphen. The Federal Trade Commission might consider a cereal called Grape Nuts "deceitful," but that hyphen makes the name "fanciful," which excludes it from prosecution according to the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act.

25. How Many Licks Does It Take to Get to the Center of a Tootsie Pop?

No thanks to that animated owl and his woeful lack of willpower, this question has plagued the American public ever since the commercial first aired in 1970. Fortunately, there have been plenty of noble efforts to get to the bottom (or center, as the case may be) of it all.

But the answer depends on who you ask. A group of students at Swarthmore Junior High conducted an extensive study on the subject and concluded that getting to the center of a Tootsie Pop took a statistical average of 144 licks.

However, the more ambitious and distrusting engineering students at Purdue University chose instead to rely on a "licking machine" modeled after the human tongue for their results, and found that it took an average of 364 licks. Other studies have been done, and all results vary, so only one thing is certain: The world may never know.

See also: link for video above [YouTube]

Big thanks to mental_floss for this awesome list! Don't forget to check out their new blog - one of my favorite stopping places on the Net:


The can opener/can question ignored the important role of Nicolas Appert, the inventor of airtight food processing. His work inspired Durand to patent the can (See this link : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Appert). Apparently Appert never took out a patent, prefering to make a gift of his method of canning to the general public.
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"Like falafel and the number "0," nougat is a product of Middle Eastern genius"

Oh dear, Mental Floss pisses off a billion potential customers. India invented the zero (hurrah!) India also invented the numbers we use. The fact they're both credited to the Middle East is a misnomer of history. Don't believe me, read the gospel truth!

Awesome list though :)
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Homemade American nougat is not bad... basically cooked butter, milk, and sugar, often just called "candy base" because we often add other ingredients and flavorings. When you make it yourself, you can control those preservatives!

PS This is an awesome compiltion.
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I think that the more appropriate answer to no. 14 would have been:

"A woodchuck could chuck no amount of wood since a woodchuck can't chuck wood."

There, plain and simple.

Whoever tells me where that comes from, and you get... well... international recognition.
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in response to Mr. Azo's comment, that wouldn't be an appropriate answer because the question specifically asks how much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood. Therefore the response to number 14 is accurate
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actually...with darwin in mind the chicken was probably around first. the chickens whose progeny was protected by a hard shell would then live to procreate again, while the less protected would die. so then, the egg would have been developed later as a protective measure.
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Hi. Reptiles lay eggs too. Since reptiles were around long before birds, the obvious answer would be that the egg did come before the chicken.

In fact most evolutionary theories, including the modern evolutionary syntesis (which is WAY more accurate than Darwin's theory, and for good reason, its almost 80 years newer), agree that birds are in fact an evolutionary offspring of reptiles. Of course, the question really is, what could exactly be defined as chicken, since, unfortunately, evolution didn't have a dinosaur lay an egg which gave birth to a chicken. In light of this, the question is almost as easy as answering when does red stops being red and turns to orange.

If that's your cup of tea, then you'd better get studying the quantum theory. I'm sure that the answer lies there, somewhere. :P
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I always wanted to know who the guy on the AOL thing was. And I've done the tootsie pop thing and it took me like 500 and some change to get there. Yeah I know pathetic I counted but I was bored and apperntly they had money burn. Anyway it was cool to find some useless facts thanks for the info.
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Whatever came before the first chicken already laid hard-shelled eggs, considering that birds are descended from dinosaurs, which also laid hard-shelled eggs. Therefore the egg containing the very first chicken was hard-shelled; ergo, egg came first.
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No 16. Associating the color black with bad or evil as in the black spot, black balled, black mail or etc was originated from ancient peoples being afraid of the night and what mysteries or unknown evil was lurking there. Innocent sounds during the day would become goblins at night. Thievery, murder, vicious animals you can’t see all preyed on the unsuspecting, blinded by the dark humans. My good friend tried to tell me that associating black with evil came from the dislike of the black race and it is racist. I explained to him that the ancient practice of associating black with evil, bad, etc. is associated with the night and is not race based at all.
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No 16. Actually, the term Black mail originated with the mideval practice of jousting. It was the custom that the winner of the joust got some of the property of the looser, usually his horse and/or his armor. There were individuals who made a living going from town to town, and challenging the local "best jouster". Of course the local couldn't refuse, and he was beaten. He would then loose his property which the traveler promptly offered to sell back to him, for a price he couldn't refuse.

The challenger traveled alone and did not have a page to clean his armor and chain mail. As a result, the armor and mail tarnshed and turned black, hence the term "black mail".
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A little known fact about #16: the chieftains would often send a messenger ahead of them who would knock on the door and, when the victim opened it, would happily announce, "You've got blackmail!"
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Actually 'me' this dos not necessarily work. Technically this question has several variable factors but the most important one is when do we define a chicken becoming a chicken? Because of Darwin's theory of evolution all animals have evolved over many millenia to what we see today. Some people in the comments section use this incorrectly to explain their point. Chickens evolved from dinosaurs and Dinosaurs laid eggs so the egg came first, wrong because a dinosaur would not simply lay a chicken as we see it today as that would take many millions of years not one generational lifespan. Additionally if we count dinosaurs as being the chickens predecessor then what came first- the dinosaur or the egg? All animals came from single celled ameobas at what is affectionately called the primordial soup. Therefore if we look at it logically the chicken, or rather the original chicken came first way before the egg which would have been developed later to protect offsping form the evolving predator.

If you would like to look a this through a simple perspective simply ask yourself where the egg came from. The egg is simply a transitional phase from conception through to growth outside of its mother. A chicken would be much more likely to survive on its own from predators with the benefits of sight and motion rather than being stationary and unaare of its surroundings. The species if it wanted to survive would have to had risen from a defendable creature rather than an undefended (from larger stronger predators) external womb. (the earlier a creature can 'fight of flight' the better, the longer it stays undefendable the more likely it is to be eaten).
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hmmm.....

When turtles lay eggs, the shells are soft and rubbery and harden after being laid. Who knows what dinosaur eggs were like millions of years ago, so I would say the rubber bag came first....
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I can sense a bad storm coming in my Sinuses . I get a heck of a headache when a Hurricane is on the way & it doesn't go away til it's Gone . Then I get another one with the clean up .Lol.
Hmm,perhaps this is also in part because I've broken my nose many times .
I can also tickle myself .
I saw a show On PBS about the Franklin expedition to find the Northwest Passage . The folks involved in the show figured that One Big Reason the Expedition Failed was that a lot of the food was in the New Fangled Cans & they were Sealed with Lead . Bad Idea .
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If the question is "which came first; the chicken or the egg?", the answer is "the egg".

If the question is, "which came first; the chicken or the chicken egg", the answer is "the chicken."

If the question is, "which came first; the chicken or the chicken-egg", the answer is "grape-nuts."

Of course that's a euphymism.
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Re. Turkeys, there's a similar misnomer in the French version of the bird, which is "Dindon" (Pronounced DAN-dohwn, more or less) This is from "D'ind..." as in "Of India" thus the French made the same error as those who called the Carib islands the "West Indies."
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Re. Turkeys, there's a similar misnomer in the French version of the bird, which is "Dindon" (Pronounced DAN-dohwn, more or less) This is from "D'ind..." as in "Of India" thus the French made the same error as those who called the Carib islands the "West Indies."

Meanwhile, I've always heard that Grapenuts was named after grape SHOT and its nutty flavor. Go figure.
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#28--It's always 10:10 in ads for analog watches because this configuration allows for the most pleasing symmetry in the image, and that causes people to find the watch more attractive (which means they're most likely to buy it).

As for the chicken/egg thing, the simple answer is, as has already been noted, that animals had been laying eggs for millions, perhaps even billions, of years before chickens evolved. But even if we ask the narrower question of "which came first, the chicken or the chicken egg?" I believe the answer is still the egg. One assumes that chickens evolved from something that wasn't a chicken, a proto-chicken, if you will. Although I suspect it would be impossible to pinpoint the exact generation in the development of chicken-kind when a proto-chicken parent birthed a bird that, thanks to some happy genetic mutation, could be called the first genuine chicken, it's clear that that bird arrived in an egg.

And I bet it was tasty with barbeque sauce.
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Question 18 begs the question...why then are people so proficiant at beating off?

#18. Why Can’t You Tickle yourself?

Much to the dismay of wacky masochist everywhere, the human brain is wired against self-tickling. Because the brain controls movement, it knows what your hand is going to do before you do it. Thus it anticipates the exact force, location, and speed of the tickle and uses that information to desensitize you to your own roving hands.
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I believe that the Interstates in Hawaii are actually correctly named (#10). The land under the military bases which they connect are not technically part of Hawaii. They are considered national land, and not part of the state. Therefore, since the highways cover both this type of land and Hawaii, they are considered interstates. I don't have a written source for this (and I may be wrong), but I was told this by a respectable member of the military on the island.
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RE: #4
Actually, in that "Simpsons" episode, Lisa beats Bart. They're having an argument of some kind, and Lisa suggests that they use Rock-Paper-Scissors to solve it. We then get an internal monologue from each of them:

Lisa: Poor, predictable Bart. Always goes with Rock.
Bart: Good ol' Rock. Nothin' beats that.

They then play, with Bart throwing out Rock and Lisa Paper. Bart then gives Homer's customary "D'oh!"
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There's no point to crediting Mayans with inventing zero
if they did not pass the info on. The ancient middle-
eastern civilizations used the invented digit long enough
for others to copy it. Sort of like sound of a falling tree in a forest: with or without someone to hear?
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Re: 8. Batteries of size B. I'm fairly certain that in
the 1950s the cube-like batteries with 2 spring contacts
on top, called lantern batteries, were called size B. I think that internally they were 1.5v cells, stacked two high, arranged in 4 parallel columns, and wired in series, giving 12 volts, just like a car battery, but not so long-lasting. One terminal was centered and one was off-center.
That may have been just one mfr's size system, and it may have been dropped.
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Despite numerous comments to the contrary, it is possible to tickle yourself, but only via one method (at least that I am aware of):

Very gently rub your gum just behind your top front two teeth (on the sloping bit that leads to the roof of your mouth).

This leads to your body shivering in that " I have been desperate for a pee, and now it's out" way.
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Chicken/Egg Thanks Bill. It amazes me how many people don't get the very simple explanation that you gave and I also give all of the time. They will still argue. I could understand if they were coming from a GOD creationism viewpoint but when they are arguing from the evolution viewpoint it is so obvious that it is painful. I can't think of the name of one of the mixed dog breeds which have gained fame but IMAGINE you had a labrador and a poodle and they had an offspring ....a labroodle or poodrador. Which came first rather obvious isn't it.
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#18. Why Can’t You Tickle yourself?

This is correct but there is an exception named your tongue. Try to stroke your tongue slowly and gentle against the upper inside of your mouth. Do this from the back to the front and you will notice that just before you hit your teeth you will feel a tickle.
Guaranteed for months of fun laughing at yourself!
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1. why is it that narrating scenes from any comedy show is nowhere near funny EXCEPT for the simpsons?
2. the grape-nut story unfortunately isn't totally correct: grape sugar (which it is still called in dutch) is dextrose, or d-glucose.. it's a breakdown product of maltose.. which is the process also occuring in the brewing of beer..
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The reason chimpanzees do so much better on the pull test, is leverage. (I learned this in physical anthropology class at Ohio State.) Their muscles are attached to their bones farther from the joint than in humans. This gives them greater leverage, therefore more force. However, the speed is reduced proportionately. So they're no good at throwing.

Bottom line: if you get into a beef with a chimp, don't wrestle it. Throw rocks at it from a safe distance.
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question 13
was not a country first. Sure, it was peopled by Turks but the place was not identified as Turkey until 1919. Previously it was known as the Ottoman Empire.
Whereas the mis-named turkey guineahens had been imported from Africa for years earlier as can be ascertained from recipes in Mrs Beaton's book of household management written and published in the 1800s.
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Thomas and Bill......THANK YOU!!!!!! I would have had to try to explain the chicken/egg thing to the other hapless retards. Your the first people ive found who have understood it.
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#18. Why Can’t You Tickle yourself?
"...the human brain is wired against self-tickling. Because the brain controls movement, it knows what your hand is going to do before you do it. Thus it anticipates the exact force, location, and speed of the tickle and uses that information to desensitize you to your own roving hands."

If that's so, why does masturbation work (so well)? What if it didn't!!!
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Dear Mr. Dear!
You kept me up all night long and could not get to finish my paper for visual communication class which was a month passed due!
BUT, Thank you so much for all the information, it was great spending time on this site...
* Stay Beautiful~
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#11 the nine mins on the snooze alarm thing.

Oddly this thing going off all the time while I was half asleep taught me one thing.

The nine times tables results for the first ten instances is a palindrome

091827365445678190

Odd the things you notice when tryin got sleep.
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i personally think it was the chicken that came first...but i guess we will never no!! anyways ive got 2 go and u r all saddo's anyway bye bye love yaz x x x x x
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I have read the article about the moon and would love to say i have a spot on th big old star. And on top of everything else, I got it for free!

Not so very long ago there was a belgian tv-show named "Robland". A man called Rob Vanoudenhoven wanted to be king of his own country. During this show he searched for lots of stuff: A national folksong, a flag, but more important: inhabits and a land.

People could go on the internet and ask to become a citizen of Robland for free. The province where people voted to become "Robiaan" the most, would become his property.

So, he got himself a piece of Belgium and went to America to ask an official agreement and acknowledgement of Robland. Some fancy minister disagreed, but Rob got himself a huge piece of the moon and he gave all Robianen their coordinates.

So now if NASA or anybody else is planning to build something on the moon: TOUGH LUCK!
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Damn I thought i'd discovered the 09182736455463728190 9 times table palindrome!

pol x beat me to it!!!

Also there is a striking amount of nines in the answers too if you're bored enough to look for them. ie 54x9=486 (4+8+6=18 and 1+8=9).
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It amazes me that in this time of scientific enlightenment that people are still holding to evolution. It has been disproven so many times that it just isn't funny anymore. As a Christian, I firmly believe in Creation, but if you don't like that, you can just go with the secular term "Intelegent Design". This way you don't have to agree that God is real, but you can agree with that which has never been disproven.

Also, I thought that the mitre saw was set for a 45 degree cut, but cutting the bread at a 90 angle, but sometimes my eyes play tricks on me (gotta love astigmatism).

Most digital alarm clocks that I have owned had a 7 minute snooze. It wasn't until the last year or so that I got one with a 9 minute snooze. Whatever. When you hit it 10-15 times in a row before finally dragging your carcass out of bed, it really doesn't matter how long it is.

Finally, Jell-o won't harden underwater like concrete will.
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Dave: Evolution hasn't been disproven, you read that in christian books I bet, but they tend to have a funny way of twisting the truth, anywho, to have any kind of credibility you may want to spell "Intelligent Design" correctly. Spelling the word intelligent incorrectly tends to show a lack of the trait in question.

Anyway, one interesting note about not being able to tickle yourself, there have been cases of schizophrenics being able to tickle themselves,
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i wanna find out where the golden arches convention is for those freakin clowns so i can tell the colonel and the king of burgers and they can go and gun his ass down, then they will separate their connection of combined efforts and rage war on one other in an all american action hero finale starring tommy lee jones as the colonel, george bush as ronny and chuck norris as the king. written by me, directed by tarantino. ...umm yeh..
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Hawaii's interstate highways can only link military bases on the same island. Yet Alaska, which has several military bases on the road system (which receives lots of federal subsidies), has no interstate highways. Any idea why?
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B batteries were used to power portable vacuum tube radios. There were several sizes and voltages and some are still available. They range from 22.5 to 90 volts. The "B" is a functional description, not a size standard. The A cell was for the filaments and some radios used the C cell for grid bias. Technically, a battery is a group of cells in series, but only engineers seem to care.
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why did Amelia Earhart disappeared out of nowhere?
this is a problem and i was thinking to find out how she died or disappeared.so i was going to find it in every website and thinking if i could find out if how Earhart disappeared out in the skies and made some answers and come up with some ideas and then i could tell it......
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I think that pregnant women should be allowed to drive in the carpool lane. Pro-life supporters believe that a fetus is technically a living child at time of conception, so if the fetus is a "living child", then why doesn't the child in question count as another person in the car?
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Seen a commercial a few nights ago:

We see pieces of firewood being tossed out into a pond. Angry man comes running out yelling "Hey you woodchucks! Stop chucking my wood!"
Woodchucks snicker and scurry off.

Obviously woodchucks can chuck wood, I saw it on TV so it must be true.
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