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Little Scientific Facts
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: Little Scientific Facts ( 13044 )
Peeka
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It's just a game...is it???
Little Scientific Facts
«
:
October 17, 2015, 03:53:47 AM »
I like a lot to read some scientific magazines and learn about the world we live in and how humanity progresses.
We often don't realize how we work as humans and don't understand our own behaviors sometimes. Being aware of our inner self and the vast outer wolrd can help us to solve some little problems in our dayly life. Consciousness is freedom!
So I wanted to share some of the things I read... and invite all of you to do the same if you wish.
Let's feed the village with a little knowledge!
Peeka
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: 3007
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Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#1 :
October 17, 2015, 04:04:35 AM »
*
Affective links with people influence our apprehension and perception of their coming touch.
Scientifics discovered that our affectivity cerebral zone is linked to the one that treats our sensations. This is why when a beloved one is going to touch us, we get goose bumps, and why a total random wouldn't provoque any reaction at all.
* in our sleep, our eyes don't move to see a panorama or the scene we are dreaming of, but to switch from one dream to another. Like turning pages of a book.
* Jupiter's biggest moon Titan has liquid water under it's icy surface. this would make it the third moon to potentially offer good conditions for life. ( bacteriological, cellular...)
martinus
Hero Member
: 1446
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#2 :
October 17, 2015, 05:55:29 AM »
10 Facts About The Netherlands
1. Not called the low country for nothing
More than a quarter of the Netherlands is below sea level. In addition to that, 50% of its land lies less than one meter above sea level. Schiphol Airport is actually 4.5 meters below sea level. Luckily, the Netherlands is not in a tsunami-prone part of the world.
2. Dutch people are the tallest in the world
With an average height of 184 cm for men and 170 cm for women, Dutchies are the tallest people in the world. Scientists say it's because of their DNA, nutrition and welfare, others say it's because of their copious consumption of dairy.
3. The Netherlands is the most densely populated nation in Europe
With 487 inhabitants per square kilometer, the Netherlands has the highest population density of any European country with more than 1 million inhabitants.
4. Flat as a pancake
The Netherlands is a very flat country. The Vaalserberg is the highest point in (the European part of) the Netherlands. It's only 322.7 meters high and located in the south-easternmost edge of the country in the province of Limburg.
5. Amsterdam is built entirely on poles
Because Amsterdam's soil consists of a thick layer of fen and clay, all buildings are built on wooden poles that are fixed in a sandy layer that is 11 meters deep on average. The Royal Palace at Dam Square is built on no less than 13,659 wooden poles.
6. Turkish Tulips
Tulips, tulip fields and flower bulbs are typically Dutch. Yet, tulips do not originate from the Netherlands. The first tulip bulbs were imported from Turkey to the Netherlands, where they proved to grow extremely well on Dutch soil.
7. About 30% of all Dutch babies are born at home
Internationally, it's customary to give birth in a hospital. Not in the Netherlands: about 30% of all Dutch births happen at home.
8. Dutchies love their coffee
After Scandinavians, the Dutch are the world's biggest coffee drinkers. They drink no less than 140 liters of coffee a year on average. That's 3.2 cups a day!
9. 86% of Dutchies speak English as a second language
All Dutch kids learn English in school and visitors to Amsterdam are often impressed with the fluency with which the Dutch speak English.
10. The Nederlands is the largest beer exporter in the world
In 2001, Dutch beer companies exported an astonishing volume of 1.3 billion liters of beer abroad. Half of that was shipped to the U.S.!
Brandybee
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Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#3 :
October 17, 2015, 04:38:45 PM »
10 Facts
about the
United Kingdom.
1. Nowhere in the UK is more than 70 miles (113km) from the sea! A place called Coton in the Elms is the furthest place from the sea.
2. It is considered an act of treason to put a postage stamp with the queen’s head upside down on an envelope!
3. In addition to the UK and Australia, the Queen is also the head of state in Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Canada, Grenada, Jamaica, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Solomon Islands, and Tuvalu.
All the above are Commonwealth Realms, or former British colonies. The British sovereign retains the position she holds in the United Kingdom, that of head of state. As in Britain, this is largely a ceremonial role from day to day.
4. Our wonderful city London has not always had this name. In the past it has been called Londonium, Ludenwic, and Ludenburg!
5. All prosecutions are carried out in the name of the Sovereign, and The Queen is both immune from prosecution and cannot be compelled to give evidence in court.
6. Big Ben is not actually the name of the clock, it is the name of the bell which is inside the clock.
7. Black cab (taxi) drivers in London have to memorise every street and important building in London within six miles from Charing Cross and they need to take a test called ‘The Knowledge’ before they can drive a cab.
8. The Queen owns all the sturgeons, whales, and dolphins in the waters around the UK, in a rule that dates back to a statute from 1324, during the reign of King Edward II. She also owns all unmarked swans in open UK waters.
9. The picture of the Queen on £1 coins show her age at the time they were made.
10. England was part of the shortest war in history. They fought Zanzibar in 1896 and Zanzibar surrendered after just 38 minutes!
THERE'S A LITTLE BIT OF DEVIL IN MY ANGEL EYES
Peeka
Hero Member
: 3007
It's just a game...is it???
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#4 :
October 18, 2015, 02:47:53 AM »
1)
Belgium has three separate language-speaking regions
the Dutch-speaking Flanders in the north, the French-speaking Wallonia in the south and the Brussels-Capital region, a French-speaking enclave within Flanders. There's a small German-speaking area in eastern Wallonia. Flanders and Wallonia are subdivided into a total of 10 provinces.
2)
The name ‘Belgium' dates back to the Romans
When they called their province in the north of Gaul, Gallia Belgica, after its previous inhabitants, the Celtic and German Belgae.
3)
Life expectancy at birth in Belgium is 81
– which is higher than the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average of 80, with women living until 83 and men until 78.
4)
Belgium's unemployment has been relatively stable during the crisis
Over 62 percent of people aged 15 to 64 have a paid job (67 percent of men and 57 percent of women). As at September 2013, the unemployment rate was 8.9 percent, a slight increase since last year's 7.4 percent but still middle-ranking among all the EU countries.
5)
Despite its small size, Belgium is a big world export player
Belgium's exports amount to more than 80 percent of its GDP, and in 2012, according to the World Trade Organisation, it was the 13th most important exporting nation in the world, with exports worth EUR 201 billion. That's 3 percent of the world's total merchandise exports – not bad for a country with less than 0.2 percent of the world's population.
6)
The level of international presence in Brussels is second only to New York
With around 120 international governmental organisations, 1,400 non-governmental organisations and 181 embassies employing 3,000 diplomats.
7)
The Big Bang theory originated in Belgium
It was a Belgian, the priest and physicist (apparently not a contradiction in terms) Georges Lemaitre, who first came up with what is now called the Big Bang theory of the origin of the universe in 1927.
8 )
Castles galore
Belgium has more castles per kilometre than any other country in the world.
9)
Belgian Chocolates: Belgium produces around 220,000 tonnes of chocolate every year
.
That means, 22 kg of chocolate is consumed per person per year or 61 grams per day on an average. The world’s biggest chocolate selling point is Brussels National Airport (aha, not any Swiss airports. What does that tell you?)
10)
Belgium has the world's longest rail network
with 4078 kilometres if you add all the tracks together.
zuzannah
Hero Member
: 1379
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#5 :
October 18, 2015, 04:18:32 AM »
I've got some facts about England Too. Not very Scientific But.....
I'll remove it if you want Peeka.
It is illegal to die in the Houses of Parliament.
It is illegal to enter the Houses of Parliament in a suit of armour.
In the UK a pregnant woman can legally relieve herself anywhere she wants, including in a policeman's helmet.
(I would dress up as a woman with a cushion tucked in front of my dress to do that)
It is illegal under the terms of the Prohibition and Inspections Act of 1998 to cause a nuclear explosion.
(Awwww Not Fair)
In the city of York it is legal to murder a Scotsman within the ancient city walls, but only if he is carrying a bow and arrow
(This is my Favourite one)
Peeka
Hero Member
: 3007
It's just a game...is it???
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#6 :
October 18, 2015, 05:26:46 AM »
Any info is nice to learn something Zu! no prob! thanks for sharing.
And your facts are very funny! Some laws of our modern world still date from middle age, we're just too stupid or lazy to change them. Funny!
AusWoody
Hero Member
: 2044
Never push a loyal person to the breaking point
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#7 :
October 18, 2015, 05:40:04 AM »
10 FASCINATING FACTS ABOUT AUSTRALIA
The first things that come to mind when we think of Australia are man-eating crocodiles, deadly snakes, poisonous spiders, and the baking hot sun. We also imagine it to be a place full of rugged men fighting off deadly predators and having grand adventures in the outback. However, there is much more to Australia than what we learned from watching watching Crocodile Dundee. Join us as we take a journey through the land down under.
10. Abuse Of Refugees
Australia is one of the wealthiest and safest nations in the world, so it’s no surprise that people fleeing torture and genocide try to get there. In 2012, 15,000 people sought asylum in Australia. These are not illegal immigrants: Arriving in a country without documentation in order to seek refugee status is legal under both Australian and international law. Of these asylum seekers, 90 percent arrive by plane, and the government is cool with them.
(you cannot board a plane without documentation, therefore these ppl are here on visa's and overstay their visa. COMPLETELY different they are still deported asap)
But the other 10 percent take the perilous journey from Indonesia in dangerous, unseaworthy boats which frequently sink on the way. What does Australia do with these boat arrivals, some of the most vulnerable people in the world?
Mandatory, indefinite detention (i.e. prison).
The UN calls Australia’s treatment of refugees “cruel, inhuman and degrading.” At Wickham Point Immigration Detention Centre, pregnant women reported constant bullying, including being forced to stand for hours in the heat and being underfed to the point of constant hunger. A woman whose newborn child is in hospital has been sent back to her detention center rather than being allowed to stay with the child. The father, also in detention, has not been allowed to visit the child at all. Remember that these people have not broken any laws.
Perhaps the saddest story of the Australian immigration system is that of Cornelia Rau. Cornelia was found on the street in a delusional state, muttering in German. Immigration officials, assuming she was a German who had overstayed her visa, locked her up in Brisbane Women’s Prison.
But Cornelia was not an illegal immigrant; she was an Australian citizen suffering from schizophrenia. Despite the fact that Germany could find no record of the woman she claimed to be, Immigration refused to consider the possibility that she was Australian. Of course, in prison without her medication, her behavior became even stranger, but the officials saw this as further proof of her untrustworthiness.
Cornelia Rau was never charged with any crime, yet she spent almost a year in prison thanks to “an inept and cruel system.”
9. World’s Longest Fence
Australia has 75 million sheep, kept for both meat and wool, and almost all of them are in the southeast of the continent. The export of wool in particular is very important to the Australian economy. The problem? Wild dogs called dingoes are also in abundance, and they consider sheep to be a tasty snack. To prevent their sheep becoming a meal for hungry predators, the Australians started building fences to keep the vermin out.
The fence was originally intended to be rabbit-proof, but in this it totally failed.
In 1880, many different fences had been built by individual farmers, which offered a sort of patchwork protection. In 1946, Australia passed legislation that brought all the fences together into one enormous barricade. New fences were built and old ones joined together to stretch across all of Southern Australia including New South Wales and Queensland.
While the Australian government does offer some subsidies to keep the fence up, the responsibility of maintenance usually lies with the landowners of the specific areas. An increasing threat to the fence is feral camels, who will smash down any section of the fence which isn’t electrified.
8. Kangaroo Meat
But without all those dingoes around, kangaroos have proliferated to the extent that culling is often called for. Kangaroo meat is very low in fat and has a rich, gamey flavor. It gets very tough when overcooked, but with a little care, it’s a delicious meat.
But until recently, most Australians wouldn’t touch the stuff. One reason is the much-talked about “cultural cringe”—the prejudice held by Australians that Australian culture is intrinsically inferior to others, particularly European. Australian music, art, and cuisine were held in low regard. Fortunately this is beginning to change.
The other, stranger reason is a kids’ TV show called Skippy the Bush Kangaroo, which was incredibly popular. Skippy would make little kangaroo sounds, and the other characters would reply “What’s that, Skippy? Someone’s in trouble?” So many people have an emotional connection now that it makes eating kangaroo difficult for them. It’d be like eating Lassie or Air Bud.
However, with the increase in environmental awareness, kangaroo meat is gaining local appeal. Unlike cows, kangaroos don’t have hooves which churn up the ground, destroying the topsoil, and they consume far, far less water, which is important in a drought-ridden country like Australia. They also don’t produce anything like the amount of methane that cows do, so their impact on global warming is smaller.
Kangaroo meat has gone from being only fit for dog food, to being haute cuisine. Now most upmarket restaurants will have at least one kangaroo dish on the menu, while kangaroo sausages are commonplace at barbecues.
Bonus fact: Australia is the only country in the world that eats its national emblem.
7. Discussion Of Euthanasia
Assisting people who are suffering from a terminal illness with their wish to end their lives has long been a contentious issue around the world. Some believe that suicide is wrong in all cases and that helping another person is basically akin to murder. Others believe it is cruel to force someone to stay alive when they are suffering and cannot be cured.
In Australia, the law takes the former stance: Euthanasia is a crime. Australia does not have a bill of rights, so although freedom of speech is a guiding legal principal, it is not actually enshrined. This has made it difficult for the country to even have a public conversation about euthanasia.
A pro-euthanasia group in Australia was going to air a TV ad using an actor to express the difficulties of terminal illness, including the quote: “I didn’t choose to starve to death because eating is like swallowing razor blades.” The ad was blocked by the censors, who felt that it promoted suicide. Of course, promoting assisted suicide for the terminally ill who desired it was the entire point of the ad, so that would make it sort of difficult to satisfy the regulatory agency.
Australia has strong laws against assisting anyone with suicide or giving them advice on the matter; despite this, polls have shown that most Australians are on the side of those who wish to voluntarily end their suffering. In the 1990s, the Northern Territory of Australia legalized euthanasia, but it was overturned by a bill passed at the federal level.
6. The Rum Corps
Most people know that colonized Australia began as a penal colony for England. However, there is much more to the story than just that.
First, England sent one fleet loaded with prisoners, soldiers, and supplies to get the colony started. Just a couple of years later, a second fleet arrived with another complement of soldiers. Things seemed to be going well under the leadership of the colony’s first governor, Arthur Phillip. However, Phillip retired from the post and one of his men, Francis Grose ended up with the position. It was after this that things began to take a turn for the worse.
The second fleet of soldiers, known as the New South Wales Corps, was now basically completely in control of the new colony, and began abusing their power. Rum became the main currency and was used to pay prisoners for menial labor. By keeping a tight hold on the rum trade, the newly nicknamed Rum Corps had control over swaths of land, supplies, and labor.
Eventually England had enough of this nonsense and sent Admiral William Bligh to destroy the power of the Rum Corps and its leader John Macarthur. Admiral Bligh had dealt with a mutiny aboard his ship the HMS Bounty only 15 years prior, but was still not quite ready for further traitorous behavior. The Rum Corps refused to go down easy, and after putting up with interference for a couple years, they staged a takeover. Bligh was found cowering under his bed and imprisoned.
It was the only successful armed takeover of government in Australian history. The Rum Rebellion was an ideological battle between the British government, which wanted to keep Australia as primarily a prison colony, and the new generation of entrepreneurs who wanted to open the country up into an independent economy. Although often overlooked, it was a pivotal event in the shaping of Australia’s identity.
5. Ugg Boots
Ugg boots were first created by Australian farmers, who used sheepskin to stay warm. As the years went by, many Australian surfers also cottoned on to using them for their warmth-giving properties. Although popular in America, most Australians consider them too dowdy to be worn outside the house. So how did they get the reputation for being fashionable in the US?
When the boots landed on American shores, a company named Decker decided to copyright them, and after a marketing blitz in which some celebrities endorsed the product, they became a runaway hit. Decker got greedy, and quickly started trying to shut down Australian manufacturers of ugg boots, for using the now-trademarked name.
To the Australian manufacturers the claim was ludicrous, as they had been selling the boots for many years already. The Australian manufacturers took their claim to court, explaining that “ugg” was actually just a slang word for “ugly,” and thus the trademark was invalid. Fortunately for the Australians, the court sided with them.
4. Crazy Cult Nuclear Tests?
It should come as no surprise that unanswered questions abound in all the vast nothingness of the Australian outback. With all that space to roam, there’s bound to be some dirty dealing going on—at least, that’s what one theory says about the mysterious events of May 28, 1993.
Some of the accounts of that day could point to a possible nuclear explosion. Now, if you have any confidence in the Australian government (though you may not after reading about their treatment of immigrants), you might not worry about this. Only problem is, the government had nothing to do with it. In fact, the group most commonly fingered for possible responsibility for the event is none other than the Aum Shinrikyo cult of Japan, famous for their 1995 sarin gas attacks on Tokyo’s commuters.
The disturbance in question was a measurable seismic event, detected by multiple government seismometers in the area. Several isolated eyewitnesses claimed to hear an extremely loud boom and said they’d seen one (or multiple) fireballs streaking down from the sky at the same time. The New York Times ran a story in 1997 investigating the possibility of Aum Shinrikyo’s involvement based on the cult’s ownership of 500,000 nearby acres of farmland and their alleged interest in nuclear weapons (they were said to have several members with a background in Russian weapons).
However, critics point out that the reports and investigations were delayed several years from the time of the alleged test, that sightings of fireballs are somewhat common in this area (meteors?), and that the applicable seismometer readings pointed to fairly standard earthquakes. But some will always hold to the cult explanation, and even the Australian Geological Survey (the folks with the seismometers) said there wasn’t enough evidence to conclusively call it an earthquake-meteor combo.
3. Stadium Hijinks
Australians love sports, and due to their passion they punch well above their weight on the world scene. Australia was fourth in medal count in the 2004 Olympics (second per capita), and they are consistently among the top-ranked when it comes to cricket. While Australians take their cricket very, very seriously, they are not without a sense of humor when it comes to the matches.
At one cricket match against England in the 1980s, a group of fans brought a cooler with them that contained an entire pig. They told the security guards that it was soon going to be lunch and they were allowed in. However, it turned out that the pig was part of an elaborate practical joke.
To make it appear that the pig was dead, they had given it an anesthetic. Later in the match, when the pig had awoken, it was released onto the pitch with the names of two of England’s chubbier players inscribed on its sides. Everyone had a good laugh, but no one knows what happened to the pig.
2. Drop Bears
You probably know that Australia has some of the more deadly animals in the world, and the drop bear ranks among them. Drop bears are similar in appearance to koalas, but much larger. Unlike the herbivorous koala, drop bears are predatory, and have the powerful jaws and razor-sharp claws to match. They are known to drop from the trees and often take bushwalkers completely by surprise.
The most fascinating fact about the drop bear is that it was completely made up to have a laugh at tourists. The origins of the drop bear myth are hidden, but it’s so well-known to Australians that any tourist trying to check the veracity of it will have the story vigorously confirmed. The Australian Museum even put together adetailed description of this fake creature and Australian Geographic published astraight-faced report claiming that drop bears are more likely to target tourists.
Other pieces of advice tourists are likely to hear include the useful tip that drop bears will stay away if you put Vegemite behind your ears, wear forks in your ear, or urinate on yourself. Admitting that drop bears aren’t real is considered by many Australians to be a worse crime against country than burning the flag.
1. Marree Man
One of the many mysteries of Australia is the Marree Man, an enormous depiction of an Indigenous man carved in the desert. The drawing is over 4 kilometers (2.5 mi) long and has been a boon for tourism ever since it was noticed, well over a decade ago. The strangest part is that no one knows who is responsible for the drawing, or how and why they put so much effort into it.
To the people who own the land and run tourist ventures, the more important question is how they can restore the drawing, as it has faded over time. The people who make money by taking people on flights over the drawing are quite happy with this mystery, but many Indigenous Australians are not so pleased. Some feel that the tourism flights over their lands are insulting to their beliefs and would prefer if the drawing was simply removed from the desert.
As no one knows who drew the figure, it is likely to remain in controversy for years to come. The area that includes the drawing has been the focus of a land dispute between two different Indigenous groups who hold opposing viewpoints on how the land should be used.
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maron211177
Hero Member
: 3435
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#8 :
October 18, 2015, 09:59:51 AM »
Looks like its time for some country promotion
ROFL
There you go ... 20 useless facts about Austria
1. You can't turn right at a red light.
2. People always wait at a crosswalk for the green man even if no cars are coming.
3. Before a light turns yellow, it blinks green. Before it turns green, it blinks yellow. Red never blinks
yes yes LOL
4. We are sticklers for the rules.
5. Austrians really do wear lederhosen and dirndls- they aren't just for the movies and Halloween
6. After drinking beer here, the beer in the States will tastes like water.
7. People drink beer all the time, even on their lunch break from work.
8. Automatic cars are rare, we can actually drive
9. Heels are difficult to wear because of the cobblestone roads ... pain in the ass, I tell you
10. Most people learn to ski when they are children.
11. There is no air conditioning in most places, including apartments ... suck it up ppl , we are used to it
12. Prostitution is legal and there are several whorehouses in town, one being next to my favorite restaurant *chuckles
13. The legal drinking age is 16 for beer/wine and 18 for liquor even though no one ever gets carded.
14. Coffee shops serve beer
15. Austrians don't like to wear wet bathing suits. We change bathing suits in public to let the wet one dry off and think nothing of it.
16. Going topless is ok.
17. Taxis are Mercedes.
18. People live in buildings that were built before Columbus found America.
19. There are co-ed, nude saunas everywhere.
20. People have longer relationships before marriage. It's not uncommon for a couple to date 8+ years.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1Yn84NVnSI
«
: October 18, 2015, 10:16:09 AM maron211177
»
The aChat Town Square
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AusWoody
Hero Member
: 2044
Never push a loyal person to the breaking point
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#9 :
October 18, 2015, 10:46:14 AM »
40 Interesting Facts about Australia
^
MORE
Ask the question of what Australia is known for to Aussies and foreigners and you'll get answers like Hugh Jackman, Nicole Kidman, Kylie Minogue, kangaroos, koalas, cricket, swimming, Sydney Harbour Bridge, Sydney Opera House, Bondi Beach, Aborigines, Minerals, wine and vegemite. Australia is much more than these. Here are 40 interesting facts to share with family, friends and visitors about Australia.
1) It is the 6th largest country in the world, occupying an entire continent of some 7.6 million square kilometres.
2) It has the world's 3rd largest ocean territory, spanning three oceans and covering around 12 million square kilometres.
3) Vegetation covers nearly 7 million square kilometres or 91 percent of Australia.
4) The largest Greek population in the world beside Athens in Greece can be found in Melbourne Victoria.
5) Most of Australia's exotic flora and fauna cannot be found anywhere else in the world.
6) The Indigenous 'Dream Time' is the foundation for tens of thousands of years of spiritual aboriginal art, traditions, legends, myths, folklore and culture.
7) The only nation-continent of 20 million people in the world.
The wattle was adopted as the national floral emblem in 1912.
9) The first Australian Friendly Society with the motto of 'Advance Australia' was the Australian Natives' Association (ANA) formed in Victoria in 1871.
10) More than 80 percent of Australians live within 100 kilometres of the coast making Australia one of the world's most urbanised coastal dwelling populations.
11) Over 200 different languages and dialects are spoken in Australia including 45 Indigenous languages. The most common non-English spoken languages are Italian, Greek, Cantonese, Arabic, Vietnamese and Mandarin.
12) The world's highest proportion of migrant settlers in a developed nation with over 25% of Australians born in another country.
13) Today's Australia is very multicultural with Indigenous peoples and migrants from some 200 countries.
14) Australia's first small step to a fully multicultural Australia was the result of immigrants from Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean after 1945.
15) It contains an amazing ecosystem with unique flora and fauna including pristine rainforest, ancient rock formations and beautiful beaches.
16) The first Australian of the Year award was awarded to Professor Macfarlane Burnet who had won the Nobel Prize in the same year of 1960 for his groundbreaking physiology research.
17) Debate continues today on the calls to change the Australian flag because of the prominence of the British Union Jack, which does not reflect contemporary Australian society.
18) It has 16 world heritage listed sites including historic townships, cities and landscapes.
19) While 1988 was named a 'Year of Mourning' for Aboriginals, it was also regarded as a celebration of survival where the Aboriginal community staged a 5 kilometre march for "Freedom, Justice and Hope" in Sydney.
20) Australia used to be a beer-drinking nation but its quaffing plunged to a 65-year low in 2010-2011 with only 4.23 litres consumed per person.
21) Aboriginal leader, Lowitja O'Donoghue, a recipient of the Order of Australia in 1976 and Australian of the Year in 1984 delivered the first milestone national Australia Day address on 26 January 2000.
22) It is believe that the Aboriginal game of Mangrook inspired the rules for Australian Football, while invented in Sydney became popular in Victoria.
23) Australia was the second country in the world to give women the right to vote in 1902.
24) The largest cattle station in the world is Anna Creek Station in South Australia at over 34,000 square kilometres is the world's largest cattle station. It is even larger than Belgium.
25) It has the highest rate of gambling in the world with over 80 percent of Australian adults engaging in gambling of some kind and 20 percent of the pokie machines in the world are found in Australia.
26) Australia Day today is a celebration of diversity and tolerance in Australian society, embracing all ethnic backgrounds, racial differences and political viewpoints
.
27) Kangaroo meat can be purchased from the supermarket, butcher and available on restaurant menus as a leaner and healthier alternative to beef or lamb with a 1-2 percent fat content.
28) Surprisingly Australia is the most obese country in the world as of 2012 with a 26 percent obesity rate despite being a sport loving nation.
29) Approximately 1.35 trillion bottles of wine are produced by Australia.
30) Former Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd's national apology to Indigenous Australians in 2007 is viewed by many as
a major milestone in reconciliation.
31) The hold of the old White Australia Policy was broken by Gough Whitlam's Labor Government which adopted a broader approach to citizenship and opening migration to Asia and the Middle East.
32) Australian TV networks love cooking shows, airing one after another upon viewership success of My Kitchen Rules and MasterChef.
33) Canberra was selected as the capital because Sydney and Melbourne could not stop arguing which city should be the capital of Australia.
Melbourne is the obvious choice
34) Australians refer to English people as Pome, which is actually the acronym for Prisoners of Mother England.
35) Ugg boots or as local call them 'very ugly boots' are an Australian design where a sheepskin has been turned inside out and made into a boot.
36) Melbourne topped 140 rivals to be crowned the world's most liveable city 2 years in a row since 2011.
37) The only place in the world where you can still find the lung fish which is a living fossil from the Triassic period 350 million years ago.
38) The sports capital of the world has 70 percent of its total population participating at least once a week in a particular recreational activity or sport.
39) Despite having a convict colony history, Australia's homicide rate is 1.2 per 100,000 population compared to the 6.3 per 100,000 in the United States.
40) 80 percent of Australians believe Australia has a strong culture and identity characterised by being down to earth, mateship, honesty, sports and multiculturalism based on research organised by the Australia Day Council of NSW in 2008.
OK so WE WIN end of story lololololol
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: 6966
Sweet As Honey With A Cheeky Sting. BUZZ !!
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#10 :
October 20, 2015, 03:40:38 AM »
@ AusWoody quote
"OK so WE WIN end of story lololololol"
mmmm Really? You see, you may not know ... but ...
The Queen holds the ability to fire the entire Australian government.
As the head of state in Australia, the Queen has certain powers over the government. In 1975, for example, the Queen's representative in the country at the time, Gov. Gen. Sir John Kerr, fired the prime minister in response to a government shutdown.
"[Kerr] appointed a replacement, who immediately passed the spending bill to fund the government, Max Fisher wrote in The Washington Post. "Three hours later, Kerr dismissed the rest of Parliament. Then Australia held elections to restart from scratch. And they haven't had another shutdown since."
Careful of the Pommies Babes... we have ways of ... mmmm tell you later in our cabin lolol.
«
: October 21, 2015, 04:14:35 PM Brandybee
»
THERE'S A LITTLE BIT OF DEVIL IN MY ANGEL EYES
maron211177
Hero Member
: 3435
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#11 :
October 21, 2015, 05:15:53 AM »
THAT explains a lot
The aChat Town Square
http://achatsquare.chatango.com
zuzannah
Hero Member
: 1379
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#12 :
October 21, 2015, 05:10:09 PM »
LOL Maron.
This one is a bit obvious really what I'm about to say. But going to say it anyway. It kind of astonishes me actually.
Watch out
NERD ALERT
But the Sun and the Moon are almost the same size when viewed from Earth.
But What a COINCIDENCE !! Something that is quite close (Moon 238,855 miles) looks almost the same size as something that is just Mind Bogglingly far away (92,955,807 miles). Just makes you think how HUGE the Sun is. (Diameter 864,938 miles)
NERD ALERT OVER.
«
: October 22, 2015, 03:49:43 AM zuzannah
»
Peeka
Hero Member
: 3007
It's just a game...is it???
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#13 :
October 23, 2015, 02:34:34 AM »
Sun is big you say?... hehe
This 2min video compares our planet and sun to the biggest stars known so far...
be ready for humility
.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEheh1BH34Q
Some wrongly talk about lightyears as a unit of time. So
what exactly is a lightyear?
One lightyear is the distance covered by light in one year. Light travels at a speed of 299 792.5 km per second. It gives us a distance of
9.461
trillion
kilometres
The light needs +-
8minutes
to reach us
from the sun
. And the reflection of light takes about
one second
to reach us
from the moon
.
Our galaxy, the
Milky Way
is about
100 000 light years across
...
zuzannah
Hero Member
: 1379
Re: Little Scientific Facts
«
#14 :
October 23, 2015, 03:31:40 AM »
Peeka, Amazing Video.
I still think the Sun is big though.
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