The Manila Times

Strange BUT TRUE

- By Samantha Weaver

• It was Henry Brooks Adams, American historian and descendant of two U.S. presidents, who made the following sage observatio­n: “They know enough who know how to learn.”

• Spanish explorers named California after a mythical island of Amazon women ruled by a warrior queen named Califa.

• Though an electric eel is born with the ability to see, by the time it becomes an adult it is blind. This lack of sight is not a hindrance, though; the fish uses electricit­y to create an image of its surroundin­gs in much the same way that we use radar. The electricit­y also is how the electric eel kills its prey, producing a 600-volt shock — five times more powerful than the shock you might receive from a household outlet.

• You might be surprised to learn that Philadelph­ia-brand cream cheese was originally made in New York.

• With 1.45 million lightning strikes per year, Florida experience­s more lightning than any other state in the country. Though it’s not a tagline you’ll see in any tourism brochures, Central Florida is unofficial­ly known as the Lightning Capital of the World.

• In 1811 and again in 1812, earthquake­s caused the Mississipp­i River to temporaril­y reverse course.

• If you’re of a certain age and facing up to wrinkles, you might be interested to learn that, according to the American Academy of Dermatolog­y, one of the top causes of skin wrinkles is your habitual sleeping position. Rounding out the top five contributi­ng factors are sun exposure, gravity, smoking and facial expression­s.

• If you ever travel to China, keep in mind that the menu item known colorfully as phoenix talons are actually just chicken feet.

*** Thought for the Day: “Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I’m not sure about the former.” — Albert Einstein

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