1. This is how Antarctica appears via an aeroplane window:
2.Hummingbird eggs are little.
And we must protect these tiny little eggs at all costs.
3.This is the appearance of a minimal security jail in Norway:
It appears more cosy than my flat.
4.Young owls slumber on their stomachs, facedown:
Their skulls are too hefty to support them in any other way, which is why. I was there, sibling.
5.In general, the number of passenger trains in the USA is generally the same as that in Europe:
Notice the distinction!
6.The size of a size 18 shoe is equivalent to the size of a drink can:
18-footers are enormous—who knew?
7.This is the appearance of a sunset as seen from space:
Hehe. Is this any more spectacular than the sunset that your mother has set as the screen saver for her iPhone? Please share your thoughts on this in the comments.
8.The four presidents’ remains were originally supposed to be buried atop Mount Rushmore:
Before the remaining presidents’ stony corpses could be carved, money ran short.
9.The double coconut seed, the largest seed in the earth, is this enormous when compared to an individual:
That’s a huge ol’ seed, folks.
10.The appearance of a $100 note in 1977, 2003, and 2017 was as follows:
Do we all adore the 2003 $100 note, folks?
11.There are amazing names for bookworms in several languages:
12.To put things in perspective, here’s how huge an average-sized person is in relation to a variety of bears and, just for kicks, the tallest guy who has ever lived, Robert Wadlow:
Bob, not quite tall enough.
13.This is what a Polish grocery store’s “American section” looks like:
Nerds, spicy sauce, Oreos…In Reese’s…I’ll consent.
14.This is how Mount Everest appears via an aeroplane window:
Sobering realisation: This image also represents the hundreds of people who were never able to descend Mount Everest.
15.Hedges have the potential to be enormous:
I want to give that hedge a pat.
16.And you, my boy, bolts? Bolts have the potential to be enormous:
Just picture the awesomeness of screwing one of these nasty guys in.
17.The USS Iowa, a battleship, is this large in relation to a typical-sized boat:
Battleships: They’re big.
18. And speaking of which, submarines are enormous as well:
Those little objects on the Russian submarine Dmitry Donskoy are people.
19.During the 9/11 assaults on the World Trade Centre, one glass panel survived. It’s this:
Wow.
20.Pineapple, cottage cheese, and a glass of milk were the final foods Richard Nixon consumed at the White House before he announced his resignation as president:
To be honest, he ought to have quit after consuming this outrageous dinner.
21.This display demonstrates the long-term effects of allowing people to smear dirty tiny hands all over marble:
The marble that has been touched is on the right, while the undisturbed marble is on the left.
22.The REST of a fire hydrant has the following appearance:
Long fella.
23.The size of Antarctica in relation to the United States is as follows:
Greater or less than anticipated? Open a window and shout your ideas into the street, or vent your frustrations in the comments section.
24.This is Sir Isaac Newton’s death mask:
It was made following his passing. It seems uneasy to him.
25.A photograph of Thomas Edison’s last breath is kept at a museum:
How does it smell, in your opinion, my friends?
26.When the Oval Office is vacant, it seems like this:
This occurred in 2001 when renovations were being done.
27.From above, this is how North Sentinel Island in the Bay of Bengal, which is home to a few last uncontacted peoples worldwide, appears:
This indicates that there is little to no interaction between the locals and the outside world. You may learn everything there is to know about the Sentinelese here.
28.Before a tumbleweed tumbles, this is how it looks like:
Well, then.
29.Travis Gienger is shown here with his 2,749-pound pumpkin, the winner of the 50th World Championship Pumpkin Weigh-Off.
Folks, do we stan Travis’s giant pumpkin?
30.A dinosaur’s fossilised skin impression appears like this:
Specifically, this impression dates back more than 70 million years and comes from a duck-billed dinosaur. resembles a basketball.
31.Is Nickelodeon Studios a memory? And all that jazz with Slime Time Live?
Now, this is how it seems as of right now:
You’re old.
32.This is the cheque for $7.2 million that the US delivered to Russia on August 1, 1868, to buy Alaska:
Would be thrilled to get $7 million directly from the US government at some point.
33.This image, captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, depicts the appearance of a fading star:
More especially, the Ring Nebula. This star’s appearance is a result of it “throwing off its outer layers as it runs out of fuel.”
34.The picture that stands just across from the “Mona Lisa” is described as follows:
Paolo Veronese’s “The Wedding at Cana” is it. Which is your favourite?
35.You ingest this little, pill-sized camera so that medical professionals may see, well, a pretty personal view of your digestive system:
We are living in the future.
36. When exposed to UV light, a cabinet filled with uranium glass appears like this:
In case you were wondering, up to 2% of uranium may be found in uranium glass.
37.The “hand” of a manatee resembles this:
Look at those little nails.
38.This is the very first photo of an image that has ever been seen on television:
The year is 1926. Is it possible to start a petition asking Netflix to stream “Man’s Blurry Head”?
39.This is the “Stairs of Death,” a very steep stairway in Huayna Picchu, Peru:
To tell the truth, I just believe “Stairs of Death” is awesome.
40.This image, taken at the 1980 Moscow Olympics, depicts several artists creating a human torch:
Ain’t that just the neatest.
41.You may dive to and visit an underwater version of an old Roman city:
It’s the partial remains of Baiae, an ancient Roman resort town located outside of Naples, Italy.
42.There are stoplights, but only for U-turns:
I’m in awe.
43.One of the earliest complete sets of body armour created for use in combat during World War I is the Brewster armour suit:
My only advice is to make sure that Gru doesn’t see you wearing it.
44.A truck is capable of moving a whole house:
Talk about a mobile home…sheesh!
45.Here’s Lonnie Johnson, the man of the Super Soaker, taking pleasure in his creation:
Bless this man.
46.In order to prevent automobiles from striking cows during the nighttime blackouts during the Battle of Britain in World War II, the cows were painted a dazzling white colour:
Thank you for your service, cow.
47.Couches, my friend…they come in a lot of sizes:
Would someone want to sit on the long Oxblood leather Chesterfield-style sofa?
48.This 1930 photo depicts an aircraft passing over Baghdad’s ancient city:
Again, I just think it’s neat.
49.A large number of trees that were planted on Earth were seeded with lunar rocks during Apollo 14:
Astronaut Stuart Roosa transported them to the moon.
50.The A303 road in England changed over time as follows:
Brings back the giant squids, I say.
51.The appearance of a lion’s fang in comparison to a cat’s is as follows:
Can you tell which is which?
52.The earliest map to ever refer to America as “America” was this one, dated 1507:
It was, as you are undoubtedly aware, “the first map to depict clearly a separate Western Hemisphere, with the Pacific as a separate ocean,” and titled in honour of Amerigo Vespucci.
53.It’s amazing how different languages can say the same thing, like “It’s the bee’s knees”:
I gotta give it up to the French here.
54.The inside of a grenade looks like this:
Never thought about this.
55.The distinction between pre-domesticated maize and contemporary maize is as follows:
56.The sad news is that 31-year-old Bobi, the world’s oldest dog, passed away last month:
RIP to Bobi the king.
57.This is the appearance of a genuine, mint-condition Woodstock 1969 ticket:
Mint 10, people. Which would you rather, this or a 2011 Topps Update card signed by Mike Trout?
58.Franz Reichelt was certain that his constructed parachute suit would save him if he leaped off the Eiffel Tower, as seen in photo 58.
On February 4, 1912, he attempted it. It didn’t come out.
59.This appears to be a 1912 eighth-grade exam. Does it pass you?
Please use the comments section to describe the heart.
60.A few scallops have an abundance of small blue eyes:
I had to learn it, and now you have to too.
And lastly, here is the appearance of a one-ton block of cheese:
Wow. Incredible.