For me it is the fact that our blood contains iron. I earlier used to believe the word stood for some ‘organic element’ since I couldn’t accept we had metal flowing through our supposed carbon-based bodies, till I realized that is where the taste and smell of blood comes from.

  • rakyat@artemis.camp
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    2 years ago

    Not exactly bizarre, but it’s fun to learn that the delicious fragrance of shrimps and crabs when cooked comes from chitin, and chitin is also why sautéed mushrooms smell/taste like shrimps.

    And since fungi are mostly chitin, plants have evolved defenses against fungi by producing enzymes that destroy chitin, which is how some plants eventually evolved the ability to digest insects.

    EDIT: a previous version of this post mistakenly confused chitin with keratin (which our fingernails are made of). Thanks to sndrtj for the correction!

    • sndrtj@feddit.nl
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      2 years ago

      Chitin is not produced by mammals.

      Fingernails are composed primarily out of keratin (same as hair and skin).

  • whileloop@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    There’s a giant ball of extremely hot plasma in the sky and we aren’t supposed to look at it. What is it hiding? Surely if someone managed to look at it long enough, they would see the truth!

  • StinkySnork@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    A day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus. One day takes 243 Earth days, while a year takes 225.

    Maybe it’s not “well known”, but still interesting in my opinion.

    • loobkoob@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      I mentioned this one to my friends the other day and it took so much convincing before they actually believed me! Definitely an interesting one. Venus also spins the opposite direction to all the other planets in the solar system, meaning the sun rises in the west and sets in the east.

    • zirzedolta@lemm.eeOP
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      2 years ago

      I’ve seen this fact somewhere before, but I still am unable to grasp it in my mind

      • sadbehr@lemmy.nz
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        2 years ago

        Short: It completes a full 360° of the sun before the planet itself does a full 360° spin.

        A few sentences longer:
        In planet Earth human terms, we have defined one day as “how long it takes the planet to do a full 360 degree rotation”. Example: You spin a basketball on your finger and it does one full rotation.

        A year to us is “how long it takes the planet to go around the sun”. Example: You hold a basketball out in front of you and you do one full rotation.

  • Mothra@mander.xyz
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    2 years ago

    Time relativity always boggles my brain, I accept the fact but I find crazy that if I strap my twin and his atomic clock to a rocket and send them out to the stratosphere at the speed of light, when they return he’ll be younger than me and his clock will be running behind mine. Crazy

    • Neil@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Light is something else. If you were a photon, your existence wouldn’t be any measurable amount of time. You’d pop in and out of existence at the same time. Not only that, but your destination would be right where you popped into existence. Point being, photons do not experience time or distance. Only us outsiders do. If you managed to travel at the speed of light, from your perspective your destination would be right where you are and you’d get there instantly. Only contact with the outside world would confirm how far you traveled and for how long.

      • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        Also the idea that light is both a particle and a wave always mess with my head because I wanted to know why does it decide to change and when? And the answer is that light is always a particle and always a wave at the exact same time.

        It is a wave particle.

        And it is possible from light alone to build both an electron and a positron as demonstrated in a 1999 laser science experiment in New York.

  • bradorsomething@ttrpg.network
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    2 years ago

    Let’s stick with the iron in your hemoglobin for some more weirdness. The body knows iron is hard to uptake, so when you bleed a lot under your skin and get a bruise, the body re-uptakes everything it can. Those color changes as the bruise goes away is part of the synthesis of compounds to get the good stuff back into the body, and send the rest away as waste.

    In the other direction, coronaviruses can denature the iron from your hemoglobin. So some covid patients end up with terrible oxygen levels because the virus is dumping iron product in the blood, no longer able to take in oxygen. I am a paramedic and didn’t believe this second one either, but on researching it explained to me why these patients were having so much trouble breathing on low concentration oxygen… the oxygen was there, but the transport system had lost the ability to carry it.