The province of Newfoundland and Labrador did not join Canada until 1949.
482
No Canadian team has won the Stanley Cup in 27 years. The odds of this happening, if all NHL teams have the same chance of winning, is about one in a thousand.
483
Albert Einstein's brain was secretly removed by the doctor who performed his autopsy. After the theft was discovered in 1978, scientists studied the organ to find explanations for Einstein's genius. To date, nothing special has been discovered.
484
In 1882, author Morgan Robertson wrote a book about ship called the "Titan" which sank in the North Atlantic after striking an iceberg. Thirty years later, the Titanic did the exact same thing. The similarities are eerie. The Titan was 800 feet long while the Titanic was 882 feet long. Both ships sank in April. Neither ship had enough lifeboats aboard to save all the occupants.
485
The Dingo Fence is the largest fence in the world. Built to protect sheep from dingoes, it very nearly divides Australia in half. At 5614 km in length, it is longer than the border between Russia and China, and longer than the distance between Los Angeles and New York.
The video itself isn’t the source. The video’s sources are the source, and the video is provided as a more interesting way of learning about the topic.
In April 1861, just as the civil war was starting, former president Franklin Pierce wrote to the other living former presidents and asked them to consider meeting and to use their influence to stop the civil war. Pierce asked Martin Van Buren to call the meeting, because he was the senior former president, but Van Buren suggested James Buchanan do it, because he was the most recent former president, or, if he was so passionate about it, that Pierce should do it himself. Neither Buchanan, Pierce, or Van Buren was willing to make the proposal public, so the plan went nowhere. Source, Martin Van Buren's Wikipedia article. I think it is fascinating to think about what would have happened if the plan went through, and I think that this would make a great interesting fact!
Does that mean Tut's father was also his father-in-law, his mother was his mother and also his mother - in - law. His wife was also his sister. His father was also his uncle and his mother his aunty. Tut was his father's son and also son-in-law and Tut's wife was her father's daughter and also daughter in law.
If the entire world had a Population Density the same as Macau, the population will be 3,178,379,600,000! (3 trillion 178 billion 379 million 600 thousand.)
In many respects, William Thomas Stead's short story, "How the Mail Steamer Went Down in Mid Atlantic by a Survivor", is even more similar to the Titanic. The story is a warning against steamers having insufficient lifeboats.
And Stead published his story in 1886, 12 years before Robertson published "Wreck of the Titan".
Spookiest of all: Stead died on April 15th, 1912. . .he was on the Titanic.
huh. I don't follow any professional sports, really, and certainly haven't been paying attention to hockey since the Washington Capitals fired my dad some 25 or so years ago... but #482 certainly seems surprising. Considering that from 1893-1928 the cup was never NOT won by a Canadian team except once... and then from 1930-1980 it seems like it was almost always won by the Montreal Canadiens (and on the years it wasn't it was usually the Toronto Maple Leafs). Only two Canadian victories since then, though. What the heck happened?
Expansion has made Canadian teams a smaller portion of the league, reducing their odds in any given year. A bigger reason is that players are paid in American dollars. When the Canadian dollar loses value relative to the American dollar, Canadian teams struggle financially. Also, American teams get more government subsidies. So, despite the greater popularity of hockey in Canada, Canadian teams can't always afford to spend to the cap, so American teams are able to build better rosters. Then there's the supposed invisible hand of the NHL, trying to rig the odds in favor of American teams. Hockey will always be popular in Canada. It will only be popular in places without winter -- Florida, California, Arizona, Nevada, Texas -- if they have winning teams.
I did not realize how long away that would be...
For our American friends, remember Beast Quake. The same process, only in Mexico City instead of Seattle
I remember that game (vs Germany)... The anthem ceremony! It seemed that Moscow was part of Mexico! Even some Germans commented that thing.
And Stead published his story in 1886, 12 years before Robertson published "Wreck of the Titan".
Spookiest of all: Stead died on April 15th, 1912. . .he was on the Titanic.
https://www.businessinsider.com/titanics-books-predicted-disaster-2018-4#:~:text=The%20second%20novella%20%E2%80%94%20%22The%20Wreck,the%20North%20Atlantic%20and%20sinks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_the_Mail_Steamer_Went_Down_in_Mid_Atlantic_by_a_Survivor