Animation créée par Sympa.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Musique par Epidemic Sound https://www.epidemicsound.com
Pour ne rien perdre de Sympa, abonnez-vous!: https://goo.gl/6E4Xna
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nos réseaux sociaux :
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sympasympacom/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sympa.officiel/
Stock de fichiers (photos, vidéos et autres):
https://www.depositphotos.com
https://www.shutterstock.com
https://www.eastnews.ru
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Si tu en veux encore plus, fais un tour ici:
http://sympa-sympa.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Musique par Epidemic Sound https://www.epidemicsound.com
Pour ne rien perdre de Sympa, abonnez-vous!: https://goo.gl/6E4Xna
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nos réseaux sociaux :
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sympasympacom/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sympa.officiel/
Stock de fichiers (photos, vidéos et autres):
https://www.depositphotos.com
https://www.shutterstock.com
https://www.eastnews.ru
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Si tu en veux encore plus, fais un tour ici:
http://sympa-sympa.com
Category
😹
FunTranscript
00:00:00The oceans cover more than 70% of the Earth's surface.
00:00:04On average, the ocean has a depth of 8 Empire State Buildings,
00:00:08and less than 5% of these mysterious depths have been explored.
00:00:12It is even possible to find lakes and rivers under the ocean.
00:00:15They are denser than the rest of the water that surrounds them,
00:00:18and so we can clearly see the difference.
00:00:21When coral is in shallow waters,
00:00:23the intense sunlight can damage the algae that live inside.
00:00:27To protect the algae, the coral produces certain proteins
00:00:30that act as a kind of solar screen.
00:00:33Most of the ocean may not have been explored,
00:00:36but what we know is that about 20 million tons of gold
00:00:39are scattered in these dark waters.
00:00:41It is spread in very small quantities,
00:00:43which is why it is not profitable to exploit it.
00:00:46If we could extract it,
00:00:48each person on the planet would receive 4 kilos of gold.
00:00:51When sharks need their morning coffee,
00:00:53they also go to Starbucks.
00:00:55In 2002, researchers discovered an area in the Pacific Ocean
00:00:58called the White Shark Café,
00:01:00where the great white sharks come during the winter.
00:01:02They meet, tell jokes and tell stories
00:01:05about the number of humans they have frightened,
00:01:07and then return to the coast to frighten us again
00:01:10when the weather warms up.
00:01:12Have you ever tasted a large white latte coffee?
00:01:15The widest point in the Pacific Ocean goes from Indonesia to Colombia,
00:01:18and at this place it is 20,000 km wide,
00:01:21which is more than five times the diameter of the Moon.
00:01:24We could imagine that the oceans are cold,
00:01:27especially in the depths where the temperature is only 4.4 degrees.
00:01:30But there is an exception.
00:01:32The water that comes out of the hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the sea
00:01:35has a temperature that can reach 400 degrees.
00:01:38Humans are the only animals whose brain shrinks with age.
00:01:42They can even do it because of isolation and loneliness.
00:01:45Other animals, even some of our distant cousins
00:01:48from another branch of the genealogical tree,
00:01:50such as monkeys and chimpanzees, do not have this problem.
00:01:53Would television be responsible?
00:01:56Our eardrums have nothing to do with the meaning of sight,
00:01:59but they still move when we move our eyes.
00:02:02During a lifetime, our heart beats on average more than 2.5 billion times.
00:02:06Some have counted.
00:02:08Our nose can detect more than a billion smells,
00:02:11and our lips are hundreds of times more sensitive than the tip of our fingers.
00:02:15Two parts of the body never cease to grow, the nose and the ears.
00:02:19Cockroaches are resistant.
00:02:21They can survive in extreme conditions
00:02:23and have been there since dinosaurs reigned on our planet.
00:02:26But the queen of termites is the great champion with a lifespan of 50 years.
00:02:30It is the longest duration that an insect can live.
00:02:33Ordinary termites live only 1 to 2 years.
00:02:36It is not water that camels store in their bones, but fat.
00:02:40They store water in their blood.
00:02:42Bees can fly very high, at more than 9,000 meters in altitude,
00:02:45which is higher than Everest, the highest peak on our planet.
00:02:49Leopards are able to hold their breath longer than dolphins.
00:02:53Yes, they slow down their heart rate and can stay like this for nearly 40 minutes.
00:02:58Dolphins have to go back to the surface to get some air every 10 minutes.
00:03:02The moon has volcanoes,
00:03:04and scientists think they could have been active about 100 million years ago,
00:03:07when dinosaurs still reigned on our planet.
00:03:10Wow, the show must have been magnificent!
00:03:14There are watermelons the size of a grain of grapes.
00:03:17Watermelons look like very small watermelons, but they taste like citrus.
00:03:23The kangaroo mouse doesn't feel the need to drink water.
00:03:26It lives in the Nevada desert, and as its habitat is very dry,
00:03:30it has simply learned to quench its thirst with the seeds it eats.
00:03:34You may think that parking is expensive in the neighborhood where you live,
00:03:37but it is probably cheaper than a parking lot in Hong Kong.
00:03:41A simple 13-square-meter square in front of The Center,
00:03:44which is the 5th tallest building in the city,
00:03:46was bought for nearly $1 million.
00:03:49That's a lot of bus tickets!
00:03:51Speaking of expensive things,
00:03:53the most expensive hot dog in the world costs $169,
00:03:57and you can taste it in Seattle.
00:03:59An Australian barista set a world record
00:04:02for the largest number of cappuccinos made in an hour.
00:04:05420!
00:04:06You can taste the garlic with your feet,
00:04:08rub a cap directly on your feet,
00:04:10don't forget to take off your socks beforehand,
00:04:12and wait.
00:04:13The chemical compound responsible for its unique smell can be absorbed by the skin,
00:04:17even if the cap is not in your mouth.
00:04:19In fact, lobsters can do the same experiment.
00:04:22In fact, they can taste any food with their paws.
00:04:26Researchers have found many traces of prehistoric animals,
00:04:29or of our human ancestors, who lived thousands of years ago.
00:04:32Bones, teeth, stone tools,
00:04:34and a piece of chewing gum dating from almost 10,000 years ago.
00:04:38In Tibet, there are black diamond apples,
00:04:41which are neither green nor red, but dark purple.
00:04:44The place where they grow receives a lot of ultraviolet light during the day,
00:04:48while the temperatures drop drastically during the night,
00:04:51which makes the skin of the apple a darker color.
00:04:54Australia has a lake of a naturally pinkish pinkish color.
00:04:58This unusual color is due to the pigment of a certain type of algae that lives there.
00:05:02Clouds sometimes look so soft that they look like giant cotton balls.
00:05:06But you should know that a cloud weighs on average 500,000 kilos.
00:05:09So please, leave it alone up there.
00:05:12A farmer in Iowa had a hockey that lasted 68 years.
00:05:16At first, he hocked about 40 times per minute,
00:05:19then after a while, only 20 times.
00:05:21This means that he spent 70% of his life hocking.
00:05:25A million seconds represent about 12 days,
00:05:28and a billion seconds represent almost 32 years.
00:05:31Nothing exceptional here, just a little math that reminds how elastic time is.
00:05:36Sharks may be more frightening than humans,
00:05:39but our teeth are just as strong as theirs, just a little smaller.
00:05:43Until the beginning of the 19th century,
00:05:45Americans thought that tomatoes were toxic.
00:05:48They missed so many delicious meals believing that.
00:05:51Farmers discovered that not only did people have regional accents,
00:05:55but that cows also made very different sounds depending on where they lived.
00:06:00Giraffes have a tongue that can measure up to 51 centimeters long.
00:06:04A little ice cream maybe?
00:06:06In fact, they can even bend trees with their tongues.
00:06:09There is a type of immortal jellyfish.
00:06:12This would make a good logo for a life insurance company.
00:06:15The earth is orbiting around the sun, but at a fixed speed.
00:06:19We don't feel it, but it slows down as time goes by.
00:06:23So our day will last 25 hours, in about 175 million years.
00:06:28Don't plan this extra hour in your schedule yet.
00:06:31Space is huge, but there is obviously a lot of emptiness,
00:06:35since there are more trees, 300 billion, on our planet than stars in the Milky Way.
00:06:40Only 300 to 400 billion.
00:06:43When we mention the largest desert in the world,
00:06:46you probably imagine the endless sandy surface of the Sahara,
00:06:49burning under a scorching sun.
00:06:51Well, not quite.
00:06:53The largest desert in the world is the Antarctic Polar Desert,
00:06:56which covers more than 14.2 million square kilometers.
00:06:59It seems strange at first,
00:07:01but the definition of a desert is a place that receives less than 250 millimeters of rainfall per year.
00:07:06However, that doesn't mean it's hot there.
00:07:09Ostriches don't really hide their heads in the sand.
00:07:12When they feel a danger, they lower their heads, their necks and their bodies to the ground,
00:07:16which makes them a little less visible to predators.
00:07:19Their light-colored necks sink into the sand, so it looks like their heads are buried.
00:07:23The first commercial flight took place in the early 20th century.
00:07:26It was a 23-minute flight, which cost each passenger $400,
00:07:31which is about $8,500 today,
00:07:34and the plane flew between two cities in Florida.
00:07:37The famous Queen of Egypt, Cleopatra,
00:07:39lived closer to the invention of cell phones
00:07:42than to the time when the great pyramids of Egypt were completed.
00:07:45And speaking of cell phones,
00:07:47today more photos are taken every two minutes than throughout the 19th century.
00:07:52Well, let's add one more to these statistics.
00:07:55Cheese!
00:07:58Once upon a time, deep in the oceans,
00:08:01there was a giant monster nicknamed the Kraken.
00:08:04People used to believe that he lived in the waters near Norway and Greenland.
00:08:08The first time someone wrote about the Kraken,
00:08:11it was a long time ago.
00:08:13It was a man named Erik Ponto Pidan,
00:08:16originally from Denmark.
00:08:18In a book called Natural History of Norway,
00:08:21he wrote that the Kraken looked like a huge octopus,
00:08:24or a huge fish,
00:08:26and that it could drag ships to the bottom of the ocean.
00:08:29Later, people began to imagine the Kraken as a kind of giant squid.
00:08:34Today, the history of the Kraken is still very popular
00:08:37and can be found in books, films, or video games.
00:08:41The stories surrounding the Kraken
00:08:43may seem to only refer to folklore or local mythology.
00:08:46However, in 2004, the first giant squid was photographed.
00:08:51This amazing discovery was made by a team of Japanese scientists
00:08:55who have been working for years
00:08:57to capture a giant squid living on film.
00:09:00They used a line with a hook,
00:09:03to which a camera was attached.
00:09:05All this to attract the giant squid to the surface.
00:09:08They also used a special lure
00:09:11imitating the wavering patterns of a small creature
00:09:13to find the creature.
00:09:15After several days of waiting,
00:09:17the team finally saw its chance.
00:09:19The image showed the long tentacles
00:09:21and the large eyes of the gigantic mollusk,
00:09:23as well as the particular shape of its body.
00:09:25But the team didn't stop there.
00:09:27In 2012, another team of scientists,
00:09:29this time working for National Geographic,
00:09:32filmed for the first time a giant squid
00:09:34in its natural habitat.
00:09:36These images allowed the whole world
00:09:38to better understand the giant squid
00:09:40as well as its behavior.
00:09:42You have certainly already heard of this myth.
00:09:45It is said that it was the most beautiful
00:09:47and richest city that ever existed.
00:09:49Its doors were adorned with marble statues
00:09:52and the architecture of this city
00:09:54was as solid as imposing.
00:09:56The representations of Greek divinities,
00:09:58beautifully painted,
00:10:00were observable almost everywhere.
00:10:02This city was the subject of an animated debate
00:10:04between historians and fiction writers.
00:10:07Because we still have very little information
00:10:09about the location of the old city of Atlantis.
00:10:12As it would have been supposedly engulfed by the waves,
00:10:15it is not surprising that some curious spirits
00:10:17associate it with other mysterious places on our Earth,
00:10:20even the Bermuda Triangle.
00:10:22But let's not go too fast into need.
00:10:24The existence of Atlantis remains hypothetical.
00:10:27The idea of an island sinking into the seas
00:10:29following a mysterious disaster
00:10:31is very widespread in popular culture
00:10:33and various mythologies.
00:10:35However, it is possible that the history of Atlantis
00:10:38was inspired by real events,
00:10:40such as the sinking of islands
00:10:42similar to those of Hellas.
00:10:44On this island, located in the Gulf of Corinth,
00:10:47was an ancient, flourishing Greek city.
00:10:49Known for its prosperity and wealth,
00:10:52it was also an important spiritual center for the Greeks.
00:10:55The city housed a temple
00:10:57dedicated to the powerful god Poseidon,
00:10:59who was thought to protect the city itself.
00:11:02However, a fateful night in 373 BC,
00:11:06a huge earthquake struck the region.
00:11:09The ground was shaking violently
00:11:11and the city was engulfed by the sea in a few minutes.
00:11:13The inhabitants of Elis, unable to escape the disaster,
00:11:16all disappeared under the waves.
00:11:18The engulfment of Elis was a real tragedy
00:11:21for the Greeks of Antiquity
00:11:23and was considered a punishment
00:11:25inflicted by the gods themselves.
00:11:27Many thought that the prosperity and wealth of the city
00:11:30had crushed them and that they had punished the city by destroying it.
00:11:33It remained underwater for millennia
00:11:36and it was only in the 20th century
00:11:38that it was rediscovered by modern archaeologists.
00:11:41Today, most of the city is still submerged.
00:11:45Since we are talking about Greek myth,
00:11:47we must mention the famous city of Troy.
00:11:49It is a legendary city of ancient Turkey.
00:11:52For years, researchers have believed
00:11:54that it was invented by poets
00:11:56and other philosophers of the time.
00:11:58According to the ancient Greek legend,
00:12:00the city would have been the refuge of Prince Paris,
00:12:02lover of Helen,
00:12:04the wife of King Menelaus of Sparta,
00:12:06and that he would have brought her with him to Troy.
00:12:08This event would have triggered a great conflict
00:12:11between the Greeks and the Trojans
00:12:13that would have spread over ten years.
00:12:15One of the most famous stories of the Trojan conflict
00:12:18is that of the Trojan horse.
00:12:20A huge wooden horse that the Greeks would have rebuilt
00:12:22and left out of the city gates
00:12:24as an offering to the Trojans.
00:12:26These, believing that the horse was an offering of peace,
00:12:29would have brought it back into the city.
00:12:31But inside the horse were Greek warriors
00:12:34who, once inside the encampment,
00:12:36would have opened the gates
00:12:38to let in the rest of their army.
00:12:40The Trojans, having no escape,
00:12:42would have been finally defeated.
00:12:45The city was rediscovered in the 19th century
00:12:47in present-day Turkey.
00:12:49It is located very close to the Scamander River
00:12:51and today, this region is an archaeological site
00:12:53that attracts many tourists every year.
00:12:56The following myth is certainly sad,
00:12:58but it could also contain a part of truth.
00:13:01It is said that many years ago,
00:13:03in the Solomon Islands of the Pacific Ocean,
00:13:05lived a man who was deeply in love with his wife.
00:13:09But she had decided to leave him for another man
00:13:12and settle on the neighboring island of Theonimanu.
00:13:15With a broken heart and full of rage,
00:13:17the man would have sought a curse to take revenge.
00:13:20He decided to embark on a canoe trip,
00:13:23determined to destroy the island where his wife had fled.
00:13:26Arriving in Theonimanu,
00:13:28the man would have planted two taros.
00:13:30He kept one for himself.
00:13:32According to the instructions,
00:13:34once his own plan would begin to grow,
00:13:37a catastrophe would strike the island.
00:13:39And that's what happened.
00:13:41From the top of a mountain,
00:13:43the man would have observed a series of devastating waves
00:13:46fall on the island,
00:13:49Theonimanu did exist,
00:13:51but we don't know exactly when it disappeared.
00:13:54It is said that the waves alone
00:13:56could not have carried this small volcanic island
00:13:58to the high summit.
00:14:00On the other hand,
00:14:02an earthquake would have probably
00:14:04made it disappear.
00:14:06The island was in balance
00:14:08on the edge of an unstable submarine slope.
00:14:10The most tangible explanation
00:14:12would be that a huge earthquake
00:14:14shook the region,
00:14:16which would have caused
00:14:18its fragile foundations to collapse
00:14:20and darken the island under the waves.
00:14:22This landslide,
00:14:24the size of an entire island,
00:14:26would have repulsed a large amount of water,
00:14:28which would have generated
00:14:30a series of mega-tsunamis.
00:14:32Thus, although these dangerous waves
00:14:34could have occurred there,
00:14:36they were very likely the result
00:14:38of another event.
00:14:40And this torn man,
00:14:42his curse fulfilled,
00:14:44and so did his wife.
00:14:46Let's not leave the vast marine expanses
00:14:48and go back to Hawaii.
00:14:50Legend has it
00:14:52that there was once a Hawaiian goddess
00:14:54named Pele.
00:14:56She was the protector of volcanic fire
00:14:58and would have arrived in these islands
00:15:00to flee her sister.
00:15:02To hide,
00:15:04Pele would have hidden
00:15:06in various hiding places
00:15:08on each of the many islands
00:15:10until she finally made her home
00:15:12The Kilauea is now known
00:15:14as the most active volcanic center in Hawaii.
00:15:16The story may be visually spectacular,
00:15:18but in reality,
00:15:20this volcanism is caused by an overheated
00:15:22terrestrial mantle that generates
00:15:24many fusions under the surface of our planet.
00:15:26It is also said that Pele's tears
00:15:28and hair were scattered
00:15:30around the volcano.
00:15:32However, reality has more to do
00:15:34with physics than with this folklore.
00:15:36When lava cools quickly,
00:15:38especially when it is soaked in water
00:15:40or when a small amount of lava
00:15:42flies into the air,
00:15:44it turns into volcanic glass.
00:15:46When it stretches and cools,
00:15:48it can sometimes form droplets
00:15:50in the form of tears.
00:15:52It can also stretch so finely
00:15:54that it begins to look like hair strands.
00:15:56We know today that Hawaii
00:15:58is a volcanic region known
00:16:00for its lava flows,
00:16:02with huge flames
00:16:04spilling from its still active chimneys.
00:16:06It is therefore not surprising
00:16:08that Hawaii is also known
00:16:10for its lava flows.
00:16:12However,
00:16:14it is not surprising
00:16:16that Hawaii is also known
00:16:18for its lava flows.
00:16:20However,
00:16:22it is not surprising
00:16:24that Hawaii is also known
00:16:26for its lava flows.
00:16:28However,
00:16:30it is not surprising
00:16:32that Hawaii is also known
00:16:34for its lava flows.
00:16:36It is not surprising
00:16:38that Hawaii is also known
00:16:40for its lava flows.
00:16:42It is not surprising
00:16:44that Hawaii is also known
00:16:46for its lava flows.
00:16:48It is not surprising
00:16:50that Hawaii is also known
00:16:52for its lava flows.
00:16:54It is not surprising
00:16:56that Hawaii is also known
00:16:58for its lava flows.
00:17:00It is not surprising
00:17:02that Hawaii is also known
00:17:04for its lava flows.
00:17:06It is not surprising
00:17:08that Hawaii is also known
00:17:10for its lava flows.
00:17:12It is not surprising
00:17:14that Hawaii is also known
00:17:16for its lava flows.
00:17:18Exactly what came to be known
00:17:20in space is space.
00:17:22Everything we hear
00:17:24is silence.
00:17:26But right next to it
00:17:28there is a huge fireball,
00:17:30the sun.
00:17:32when a shooting star passes close to you.
00:17:35But wait, is it really a star?
00:17:38And no, shooting stars are not stars at all.
00:17:41They are small pebbles called meteoroids
00:17:45that penetrate the Earth's atmosphere
00:17:47and create a beautiful luminous spectacle.
00:17:50And since we are debunking myths,
00:17:52here is another one right away.
00:17:55You have probably heard that meteors
00:17:57only rarely crash on Earth.
00:18:00Like when a violent apocalypse
00:18:02decimates all dinosaurs.
00:18:04It's not true.
00:18:06Scientists estimate that about 48 tons
00:18:09of meteorological material falls on Earth every day.
00:18:12But almost all of this material
00:18:14evaporates into the atmosphere.
00:18:17The luminous trail we see in the sky
00:18:19is what we call a shooting star.
00:18:22The next time you make a wish,
00:18:24remember that it is actually
00:18:26a tiny space debris.
00:18:28After all, it's not that romantic.
00:18:33Can we fly in the stratosphere in Montgolfière?
00:18:37Apparently, it's possible.
00:18:39The Earth's stratosphere starts relatively close to the ground.
00:18:42It rises to about 11 or 12 km
00:18:45above the Earth's surface.
00:18:48But it then continues very high.
00:18:50If you want to fly to the stratosphere
00:18:52using a Montgolfière,
00:18:54you will need very good equipment.
00:18:56You will need a special suit
00:18:58and a respirator.
00:19:00Because the air is getting rarer
00:19:02as we rise.
00:19:04Of course, if you go all the way,
00:19:06don't forget to photograph the curvature of the Earth.
00:19:09So equip yourself with a chest harness
00:19:11to hang a camera or a camera.
00:19:14And if you broadcast all this live,
00:19:16it would be a first.
00:19:19Imagine that 102 days ago
00:19:21you left Earth.
00:19:23You are well adapted to life in space.
00:19:25But something strange happens in your body.
00:19:28You grow up.
00:19:30How is this possible?
00:19:32Don't worry, it's perfectly normal.
00:19:35In fact, you don't really grow up.
00:19:38It's just that your body
00:19:40no longer undergoes the effect of gravity.
00:19:42Your body has a natural space
00:19:44between the vertebrae and the joints.
00:19:47On Earth, this space is almost entirely
00:19:50compressed by the force of gravity.
00:19:52But in space,
00:19:54the force released by this force
00:19:56begins to stretch.
00:19:58So yes,
00:20:00astronauts grow by 3%
00:20:02when they carry out long missions.
00:20:04And here's a curiosity.
00:20:06NASA doesn't forget this
00:20:08when it makes custom space suits.
00:20:10So, astronauts will always have
00:20:12an extra space in their suit.
00:20:15Once astronauts return to Earth,
00:20:17the anti-gravity effect will fade away.
00:20:19They may spend a few days in short pants
00:20:21before finding a normal size,
00:20:23but everything will be fine.
00:20:26Have you ever imagined
00:20:28a plane door opening in full volume
00:20:30and a group of passengers
00:20:32sucked into the atmosphere like feathers?
00:20:34This is something we see quite often
00:20:36in disaster movies.
00:20:38Now imagine that this happens in space.
00:20:41We commonly believe that
00:20:43if an astronaut is sucked out of a SASS,
00:20:45he will be burned alive, instantly.
00:20:48But beware,
00:20:50this is not only true.
00:20:52In fact, the reality is much worse.
00:20:54According to astronaut Chris Hadfield,
00:20:56this is what would happen.
00:20:58The part of your body
00:21:00located in the shade
00:21:02would be subjected to a temperature
00:21:04of less than 250°C,
00:21:06and the part exposed to the sun
00:21:08would heat,
00:21:10under a temperature of 250°C.
00:21:12Your lungs would suffocate
00:21:14and your blood would boil.
00:21:16You would be burned, frozen,
00:21:18unable to breathe,
00:21:20and boiled.
00:21:22Not recommended.
00:21:24How many times have you heard
00:21:26that astronauts had to train
00:21:28every second of the day
00:21:30in order to faint?
00:21:32This is a myth.
00:21:34Do you remember what we said
00:21:36about gravity?
00:21:38Due to the absence of gravity in space,
00:21:40our body does not have to work very hard.
00:21:42Our torsos do not have to carry
00:21:44the weight of our heads.
00:21:46And we do not have to make an effort
00:21:48because we do not really walk in space.
00:21:52Imagine now that you lived like this
00:21:54for six months, or even a year.
00:21:56Your muscles would quickly
00:21:58turn frozen.
00:22:00This is why astronauts train.
00:22:02They tie themselves up
00:22:04and run on a treadmill,
00:22:06or they do weight training
00:22:08on a special machine.
00:22:10In this way, their muscles do not feel
00:22:12too much the absence of gravity.
00:22:14However, they must hydrate.
00:22:16If I were an astronaut,
00:22:18I would ask NASA
00:22:20if I could take my can of water
00:22:22in space with me.
00:22:24You may have heard
00:22:26that space smells like burnt steak
00:22:28or barbecue sauce.
00:22:30Even if it seems absurd,
00:22:32this myth is more true than false.
00:22:34Astronauts obviously cannot
00:22:36smell space
00:22:38when they are there,
00:22:40because they cannot take off their helmets.
00:22:42They usually smell it
00:22:44when they are at sea
00:22:46and when they have opened the SASS.
00:22:48Apparently, this smell is due
00:22:50to the presence of hydrocarbons
00:22:52floating in space.
00:22:54Who believed it?
00:22:56Now let me ask you a question.
00:22:58Do you really think that if astronauts
00:23:00could fly at the speed of light,
00:23:02they would not age for a second?
00:23:04I knew you would say no.
00:23:06Let's get this straight.
00:23:08First of all, we have not yet found
00:23:10how to travel at the speed of light.
00:23:12Second, even if we managed
00:23:14to put a human inside a spaceship
00:23:16traveling at the speed of light,
00:23:18this person would continue to age.
00:23:20It would age differently
00:23:22from the people left on Earth.
00:23:24It's a fact,
00:23:26but it would age anyway.
00:23:28Do you really believe
00:23:30that immortality exists?
00:23:32No.
00:23:34If you have seen Avatar 1,
00:23:36you certainly remember
00:23:38that humans only managed
00:23:40to age thanks to cryosleep.
00:23:42They freeze their bodies,
00:23:44place them in cryogenic beds
00:23:46and travel for years without aging.
00:23:48Yes, it seems incredible,
00:23:50but this technology
00:23:52does not yet exist.
00:23:54Our body is mainly made up of water,
00:23:56isn't it?
00:23:58And when we freeze water,
00:24:00it expands.
00:24:02That's why you should never
00:24:04leave a can of soda
00:24:06unsupervised in the freezer.
00:24:08It contains this dilated substance
00:24:10and it would damage the tissues and organs.
00:24:12So no, we can't cryosleep
00:24:14to travel in space,
00:24:16not yet at least.
00:24:18Here's a crazy idea.
00:24:20What would happen if an astronaut
00:24:22took a drone out into space?
00:24:24Unless it's a drone
00:24:26designed by NASA,
00:24:28the device would freeze and probably burn
00:24:30without special protection.
00:24:32But we can still dream, right?
00:24:34Today,
00:24:36we're going on a journey
00:24:38in the history of art.
00:24:40Our main goal
00:24:42is to unravel the mystery
00:24:44of whether all the ancient statues
00:24:46have always been white.
00:24:48We're going to visit museums
00:24:50and even travel back in time
00:24:52to try to get a glimpse
00:24:54of what these statues really looked like
00:24:56at the time.
00:24:58To begin with,
00:25:00we land in New York.
00:25:02The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
00:25:04And we enter this huge museum.
00:25:08We take a corridor
00:25:10and arrive in the room
00:25:12where one of the world's largest
00:25:14collections of ancient Greek and Roman statues is located.
00:25:16Admiring the wide range of statues,
00:25:18one thing catches the eye.
00:25:20They are mainly white.
00:25:22It makes sense
00:25:24since their main material is white marble.
00:25:26For centuries,
00:25:28historians, archaeologists
00:25:30and researchers have always
00:25:32considered this fact as a given.
00:25:34Haven't these statues
00:25:36always been white?
00:25:38Until the last decades,
00:25:40it was not a question that was discussed.
00:25:42But in the 1980s,
00:25:44researchers unearthed
00:25:46an ancient Greek statue that was clearly pigmented.
00:25:48This new discovery
00:25:50prompted them to wonder
00:25:52whether all the ancient statues were painted.
00:25:54Let's take a closer look
00:25:56at this work of art.
00:25:58We discovered that this Greek statue
00:26:00from the 3rd century BC
00:26:02was almost entirely painted.
00:26:04Still in its original form.
00:26:06No need to be an expert
00:26:08to notice that the statue
00:26:10still has some of its original colors
00:26:12with a few shades of blue and red.
00:26:16In reality,
00:26:18this statue is no exception.
00:26:20It's the norm.
00:26:22It turns out that ancient civilizations
00:26:24actually painted their sculptures
00:26:26in bright and vivid colors.
00:26:28But somewhere along our historical timeline,
00:26:30this information has been lost.
00:26:32According to researchers,
00:26:34pigmented sculptures were a way
00:26:36to bring their representations closer to real life.
00:26:40We live in bright colors.
00:26:42So why wouldn't art reflect that?
00:26:46Let's take a step back
00:26:48to understand what happened.
00:26:50Why are the galleries of our museums
00:26:52filled with hopelessly white statues?
00:26:56You've probably heard of
00:26:58Michelangelo.
00:27:00He was a famous Italian sculptor
00:27:02who was credited with
00:27:04the iconic David
00:27:06and the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.
00:27:08Michelangelo was one of the most
00:27:10emblematic painters of the Renaissance.
00:27:12The Renaissance was a historical period
00:27:14during which artists,
00:27:16philosophers and European scientists
00:27:18developed a renewed interest
00:27:20in the creation of Greece
00:27:22and Ancient Rome.
00:27:24Artists like Michelangelo
00:27:26studied a series of Roman sculptures,
00:27:28such as the group of Laocoon.
00:27:32They fell in love
00:27:34with their realistic figures
00:27:36and their white, immaculate marble.
00:27:38The only thing they didn't know,
00:27:40and they didn't have the technology
00:27:42to find out, was if the pigments
00:27:44of these sculptures had faded.
00:27:46After all, they were found
00:27:48after being buried or left
00:27:50in the open air for years.
00:27:52It is said that this statue,
00:27:54the Laocoon in particular,
00:27:56had snakes and coloured coats,
00:27:58for example.
00:28:00When the Renaissance artists
00:28:02paid homage to the ancient artists,
00:28:04they also left their masterpieces
00:28:06naked.
00:28:08They sculpted directly on the marble
00:28:10and left them white,
00:28:12without pigmentation,
00:28:14probably because they thought
00:28:16that's how things were done
00:28:18in the past.
00:28:20This way of making art
00:28:22has therefore traveled
00:28:24to modern times
00:28:26without too many questions.
00:28:28However, there is evidence
00:28:30of the presence of colour pigments
00:28:32in ancient statues.
00:28:34Some research reveals
00:28:36that scholars have known
00:28:38for at least a century
00:28:40that the ancient sculptures
00:28:42were not all white.
00:28:44Other studies suggest
00:28:46that this discovery
00:28:48was made by archaeologist
00:28:50Vincenz Brinkmann.
00:28:52While he was a student
00:28:54at the Ludwig Maximilian University
00:28:56in Munich, he developed
00:28:58a technology capable of detecting
00:29:00polychromy in ancient
00:29:02samples of Greek statues.
00:29:04Polychromy is the art of painting
00:29:06in several colours.
00:29:08Whatever it is,
00:29:10he was surprised by his discovery
00:29:12and wondered why other
00:29:14researchers and archaeologists
00:29:16did not.
00:29:18It turns out that the first discovery
00:29:20that ancient statues were not so white
00:29:22took place a long time ago,
00:29:24long before Brinkmann's birth.
00:29:26It took place during the
00:29:28exhumation of Pompeii
00:29:30in the 1700s.
00:29:32As you may know,
00:29:34the city of Pompeii in southern Italy
00:29:36was completely covered with lava
00:29:38after the sudden eruption
00:29:40of Mount Vesuvius.
00:29:42The city was destroyed,
00:29:44but the ashes from the lava
00:29:46preserved a large part of the city's structure
00:29:48over time.
00:29:50For the greatest happiness
00:29:52of art historians and archaeologists,
00:29:54Pompeii became a privileged
00:29:56excavation site for understanding
00:29:58ancient Rome.
00:30:00Researchers found several preserved frescoes
00:30:02depicting scenes from Roman everyday life.
00:30:04In one of them,
00:30:06you can see an artist painting a sculpture.
00:30:08This fact was documented
00:30:10by a very famous art historian
00:30:12known as Joan Joachim Winkelmann.
00:30:14He is also considered
00:30:16the father of art history.
00:30:20Now let's take a closer look
00:30:22at another famous statue.
00:30:24To admire it,
00:30:26you have to go to Rome
00:30:28and visit the Vatican Museums.
00:30:30The statue is a
00:30:32classical representation
00:30:34of Caesar Augustus.
00:30:36In case you don't know,
00:30:38he is the founder of the Roman Empire
00:30:40and the first emperor of Rome.
00:30:42He is an important figure.
00:30:44The sculpture is called
00:30:46Augustus de Prima Porta.
00:30:50You may have already seen it
00:30:52in a history manual.
00:30:54It is always represented
00:30:56in white marble.
00:30:58But according to an archaeological
00:31:00discovery from the 1860s,
00:31:02the original statue
00:31:04was much more colorful.
00:31:06According to archaeologists,
00:31:08the Augustus de Prima Porta
00:31:10had a red tunic,
00:31:12a yellow armor,
00:31:14and a purple coat.
00:31:16It is important to keep in mind
00:31:18that the colors were not artificially
00:31:20made as they are today.
00:31:22Artists could only produce colors
00:31:24from natural resources.
00:31:26Thus, purple, for example,
00:31:28was an extremely difficult color to make.
00:31:30At the time,
00:31:32purple was extracted from the mucus
00:31:34of a rare species of snails.
00:31:36This means that anyone
00:31:38who used purple to pigment
00:31:40their art and clothes
00:31:42was powerful and rich.
00:31:44This seems to be sufficient proof
00:31:46that the ancient statues
00:31:48were not always white.
00:31:50But as we can judge
00:31:52by the appearance of our modern museums,
00:31:54there does not seem to have been
00:31:56enough interest in the artistic community
00:31:58to explore more polychromy
00:32:00on ancient statues.
00:32:02But do you remember the archaeologist
00:32:04Brinkmann?
00:32:06Well, he has been collecting
00:32:08data on polychromy since the 1980s.
00:32:10At one point,
00:32:12he even began to make
00:32:14colored replicas of his statues.
00:32:16The technology used
00:32:18is far from simple.
00:32:20To reconstruct
00:32:22his ancient works of art,
00:32:24Brinkmann made a 3D plaster copy.
00:32:26Then he painted them by hand
00:32:28with his wife's help.
00:32:30To discover
00:32:32which colors were used
00:32:34in the original sculptures,
00:32:36Brinkmann uses UV light.
00:32:38Some pigments shine under the UV light,
00:32:40exposing traces
00:32:42that would otherwise be invisible.
00:32:44Let's take the example
00:32:46of this colored arch.
00:32:48Look at these colors.
00:32:50This piece is the reconstruction
00:32:52of a marble arch in the costume
00:32:54of a rider.
00:32:56To faithfully represent the arch,
00:32:58the restorers had to do a lot of research
00:33:00to find the original piece.
00:33:02Colors have a cultural meaning.
00:33:04Associated with UV technology,
00:33:06this allowed the reconstruction
00:33:08that we can admire now.
00:33:10It seems very far from the idea
00:33:12that we have of what the Greeks would have done.
00:33:14But it is supposed to look
00:33:16exactly like the original.
00:33:18According to Brinkmann,
00:33:20we should not be so surprised
00:33:22that the ancient Western civilizations
00:33:24used vivid colors
00:33:26to depict reality.
00:33:28After all, the Romans and the Greeks
00:33:30were strongly inspired
00:33:32by the works of art
00:33:34of the Egyptian civilization
00:33:36of ancient Mesopotamia and Asia.
00:33:38For example, if we look at
00:33:40the famous Egyptian sphinx,
00:33:42we can be led to believe
00:33:44that it always had this appearance.
00:33:46But this is not at all the case.
00:33:48Modern studies and virtual reconstructions
00:33:50of the monument show us
00:33:52that it was very colorful.
00:33:54The body of the statue
00:33:56was made of baked earth,
00:33:58while the royal crown
00:34:00around the head
00:34:02would have been golden and blue.
00:34:04All these colors were considered
00:34:06important in the Egyptian era
00:34:08and it was quite appropriate
00:34:10to use them to represent a pharaoh.
00:34:12It all happened in 1708.
00:34:14On June 8,
00:34:16the Spanish galleon San José
00:34:18entered Spain from the Caribbean.
00:34:20In total,
00:34:22there were 17 ships.
00:34:24The captain of the San José
00:34:26knew he was going to have trouble
00:34:28because English ships were
00:34:30roaming the region.
00:34:32He knew he would be looking
00:34:34for the treasure loaded on the ships.
00:34:36The value of the treasure
00:34:38from the New World
00:34:40was so astronomical
00:34:42that it could shake
00:34:44the course of events in Europe.
00:34:46To be safe,
00:34:48the Spanish galleon
00:34:50had to reach Cartagena de Indias,
00:34:52but unfortunately,
00:34:54another fate awaited the San José.
00:34:56The four English ships appeared.
00:34:58The galleon could not escape them.
00:35:00They had no choice
00:35:02but to turn around
00:35:04and fight.
00:35:06It was then that chaos began.
00:35:08The red flags indicated
00:35:10that the battle had begun.
00:35:12The cannons in action.
00:35:14The smell of gunpowder.
00:35:16No one knows exactly
00:35:18how it all ended.
00:35:20The only thing
00:35:22that remained in history
00:35:24was the shipwreck
00:35:26of the Admiral San José
00:35:28and then silence.
00:35:30The Admiral's ship,
00:35:32the San José,
00:35:34was a very important
00:35:36strategic point of view.
00:35:38It carried an incredible amount
00:35:40of precious metals
00:35:42such as gold and silver,
00:35:44but also pearls
00:35:46and precious stones
00:35:49But how did this lost treasure
00:35:51become a legend?
00:35:53First of all, the financial estimates
00:35:55of the treasure advanced by the scientists
00:35:57shocked everyone.
00:35:59The ship would have carried
00:36:01between 7 and 12 million pesos.
00:36:03Okay, this may not be
00:36:05Elon Musk's fortune,
00:36:07but today it represents
00:36:09about 10 billion dollars.
00:36:11With this money, you could
00:36:13afford private jets,
00:36:15a Lamborghini parking
00:36:17and you would still have
00:36:19a lot of money.
00:36:21Like the pieces found
00:36:23on the Titanic,
00:36:25we could think that all this
00:36:27must have rusted.
00:36:29But when it comes to gold,
00:36:31things are different.
00:36:33The Titanic did not carry gold
00:36:35or at least not much.
00:36:37The jewels found on the Titanic
00:36:39were personal effects.
00:36:41But what's great about gold
00:36:43is that it never reacts
00:36:45and does not tarnish.
00:36:47If your necklace is in gold
00:36:49and becomes a little darker,
00:36:51it is the sign that it is not pure gold
00:36:53but an alloy,
00:36:55which is also interesting
00:36:57because you can easily clean it.
00:36:59To go back to the lost treasure
00:37:01of San Jose, the gold pieces
00:37:03that are there, even more than
00:37:05300 years later, are supposed
00:37:07to have the same appearance
00:37:09today as the day
00:37:11they were hit.
00:37:13Do you remember that I told you
00:37:15that the captain wanted to go to the shore
00:37:17where Colombia is today?
00:37:19Well, on December 4, 2015,
00:37:21the ship was indeed found
00:37:23in the waters of Colombia.
00:37:27As for many other important things today,
00:37:29the world learned it by a tweet
00:37:31sent by the Colombian president
00:37:33of the time, Juan Manuel Santos.
00:37:35It's been decades
00:37:37since we've been looking for San Jose
00:37:39and once it was found,
00:37:41its popularity only grew
00:37:43and the myths about it multiplied.
00:37:47One of the legends was told
00:37:49by Lord Santos himself.
00:37:51After the discovery of the wreck,
00:37:53he gave a brief interview on the radio.
00:37:55The fact is that the discovery
00:37:57was rather unexpected.
00:37:59Many people have devoted a lot of time
00:38:01and effort to the search for this wreck
00:38:03and many of them had even
00:38:05given up hope of finding it one day.
00:38:07Juan Manuel Santos told
00:38:09how the wreck had been discovered.
00:38:11During an official event
00:38:13outside Colombia,
00:38:15he was approached by a man.
00:38:17He looked like the famous
00:38:19writer Hemingway.
00:38:21He wore a white beard and had white hair.
00:38:23The only thing this man wanted
00:38:25to look like Hemingway
00:38:27was two minutes of Santos' speech.
00:38:29The president gave in and listened to this man.
00:38:31What happened next is incredible.
00:38:33The man took out an old card,
00:38:35more precisely a carefully framed copy
00:38:37and told the president
00:38:39that no one else knew it.
00:38:41The man pointed to a precise place
00:38:43by declaring that it was the exact
00:38:45place where the treasure was
00:38:47and that this place did not appear
00:38:49on any other card.
00:38:51He assured that he knew
00:38:53where the treasure was.
00:38:55The story seemed crazy
00:38:57and full of caps and swords.
00:38:59Who was this man?
00:39:01He turned out to be right.
00:39:03His identity remains a mystery
00:39:05to everyone, but in one way or another
00:39:07this man had found the funding,
00:39:09determined the area to be inspected
00:39:11and even made his way
00:39:13to the president.
00:39:15Of course,
00:39:17the San Jose was full of gold
00:39:19and whoever found it would be rich
00:39:21until the end of his days.
00:39:23But let's be realistic.
00:39:25No ordinary person could discover
00:39:27such a treasure because it requires
00:39:29too much effort and too much money.
00:39:31That said, what about when you are
00:39:33hunting for a treasure and you are
00:39:35looking for a treasure chest?
00:39:37Well, I think I have a story
00:39:39to tell about ordinary people
00:39:41who look for your finesse even by
00:39:43finding a real treasure.
00:39:45Here is Forrest Fenn,
00:39:47an eccentric millionaire who hid
00:39:49a treasure of 1 to 5 million dollars.
00:39:51His exact value has not been identified.
00:39:53Mr. Fenn himself
00:39:55said that he had never
00:39:57tried to evaluate it.
00:39:59The chest contained 265 eagles
00:40:01double eagles in American gold,
00:40:03ancient coins, gold nuggets
00:40:05and many other things.
00:40:07Forrest hid the chest in the
00:40:09rocky mountains and announced
00:40:11the treasure hunt in 2010.
00:40:15Let's focus a little on a map
00:40:17and see how vast the rocky mountains are.
00:40:19In other words,
00:40:21treasure hunters had to sweep
00:40:23the two countries, the United States
00:40:25and Canada.
00:40:27At first, it was a small treasure hunt
00:40:29that only a few people knew about.
00:40:31But some time later,
00:40:33the competition grew.
00:40:35Tens of thousands of people
00:40:37started looking for the treasure.
00:40:39Research has shown that
00:40:41over the decade,
00:40:43about 3,100,000 people
00:40:45have tried their luck
00:40:47looking for the mysterious chest.
00:40:49To announce the hunt,
00:40:51Forrest Fenn used a 24-line poem.
00:40:53This poem contained clues that
00:40:55most treasure hunters
00:40:57had never heard of.
00:40:59The chest was so well hidden
00:41:01that it took 10 years to discover it.
00:41:03There was also a blog
00:41:05called Thrill of the Chase.
00:41:07And on June 6, 2020,
00:41:09Mr. Fenn finally published
00:41:11the long-awaited news.
00:41:13The treasure had been found.
00:41:15Forrest himself admitted that
00:41:17anyone who read the instructions
00:41:19of the poem could find the treasure.
00:41:21The poem went viral on the Internet.
00:41:23Many Internet users
00:41:25tried to decode the 9 clues
00:41:27it contained.
00:41:29Some of them even gave possible keys
00:41:31to decode the puzzle.
00:41:33These speculations
00:41:35may have helped the person
00:41:37who finally found the treasure.
00:41:39At first, Forrest Fenn himself
00:41:41did not know who had deciphered
00:41:43all the codes of the poem,
00:41:45crossed the dense forest
00:41:47and retrieved the chest.
00:41:49The lucky winner
00:41:51had preferred to remain anonymous.
00:41:53The winner sent a photo
00:41:55to Forrest Fenn,
00:41:57and the treasure hunt was officially over.
00:41:59But some time later,
00:42:01he revealed himself.
00:42:03It was Jack Stueff,
00:42:05a former journalist
00:42:07and medical student.
00:42:09The treasure was hidden
00:42:11under a cloud of stars
00:42:13in a forest of rocky mountains.
00:42:15The vegetation there is luxurious,
00:42:17which explains why
00:42:19the chest was hidden in depth.
00:42:21The exact location is still unknown,
00:42:23but we know that the treasure
00:42:25was hidden in Wyoming.
00:42:27Jack admits that
00:42:29all the treasures announced
00:42:31had not been found in the chest.
00:42:33A small golden frog on a necklace
00:42:35and a Spanish emerald ring
00:42:37were missing.
00:42:39Forrest indeed found the frog
00:42:41in his collection and gave it to Stueff,
00:42:43but he did not find the ring.
00:42:45The treasure hunt created by Forrest Fenn
00:42:47may seem extravagant,
00:42:49but he explained why he had decided
00:42:51to launch it.
00:42:53The only thing he claimed to have in mind
00:42:55was to give people hope.
00:42:59It looks like they come out
00:43:01of our worst nightmares.
00:43:03There is no proof that these beasts exist,
00:43:05but all the terrifying stories about them,
00:43:07broadcast from generation to generation,
00:43:09sometimes seem true.
00:43:11What is your favorite?
00:43:15The first creature you think of
00:43:17is probably Bigfoot.
00:43:19A huge creature
00:43:21with the trace of a monkey
00:43:23that leaves giant footprints
00:43:25reminding the inhabitants
00:43:27of the northwestern Pacific
00:43:29that it really exists.
00:43:31There are other legends
00:43:33about other creatures,
00:43:35such as the legend
00:43:37of the monster of Mogollon,
00:43:39sometimes called the Bigfoot of Arizona.
00:43:43This creature is 2 meters high
00:43:45and would have red eyes.
00:43:49It would have been seen
00:43:51in the surroundings of the Mogollon Rim.
00:43:53It is said that it is covered
00:43:55with brown or black hair,
00:43:57except its face, its torso,
00:43:59its feet and its hands.
00:44:01It would reproduce the sounds
00:44:03of the local fauna,
00:44:05such as the cries of coyotes
00:44:07and the songs of birds.
00:44:09It is said that it explores
00:44:11camping sites as soon as night falls.
00:44:13It is said that if you are alone
00:44:15and someone you do not see
00:44:17throws rocks at you,
00:44:19well, it is necessarily
00:44:21the monster of the Mogollon.
00:44:23This creature would be omnivorous.
00:44:25It feeds on animals and plants.
00:44:27It is said that it prefers
00:44:29to move at night
00:44:31in search of innocent prey
00:44:33in the woods.
00:44:35Urayuli.
00:44:37A mythical creature
00:44:393 meters high
00:44:41and 3 meters long.
00:44:43The legend says that its
00:44:45slender arms are so large
00:44:47that they would reach the ankle.
00:44:49The creature would be covered
00:44:51with a thick fur.
00:44:53The only thing that is not covered
00:44:55with hair that you can see
00:44:57on its face are its bright eyes.
00:44:59The legend says that Urayuli
00:45:01uses its bright eyes
00:45:03to hypnotize its prey.
00:45:05But we do not agree
00:45:07since other stories
00:45:09say that Urayuli
00:45:11is a kind of Bigfoot.
00:45:13Wendigo.
00:45:15It is said that this terrifying creature
00:45:17hides in the northern forests
00:45:19of Canada and the United States
00:45:21in search of its victims.
00:45:23According to the legend,
00:45:25Wendigo was a hunter
00:45:27who got lost one day
00:45:29and the cold turned him
00:45:31into a 4-meter-long beast
00:45:33with dried skin
00:45:35and pointed long tails.
00:45:37Wendigo appeared for the first time
00:45:39in stories from the 20th century.
00:45:41The locals claim
00:45:43that the beast is still alive
00:45:45and that it wanders through the forest
00:45:47in search of lost people
00:45:49that it could kidnap.
00:45:51The monster of Lake Worth.
00:45:53This terrifying creature,
00:45:55half man, half goat,
00:45:57is also called the monster of the island.
00:45:59It is said that it is a 2-meter-high
00:46:01beast so strong
00:46:03that it can swing tires
00:46:05In the worst case,
00:46:07it appears in the dark
00:46:09by jumping from the trees
00:46:11on the hood of moving cars.
00:46:13This is how it was described
00:46:15by the first people
00:46:17who say they saw it.
00:46:19Lake Worth
00:46:21is located west of Dallas
00:46:23and east of Fort Worth.
00:46:25There is a mass of land
00:46:27in the middle of this mystical lake
00:46:29called Grier Island.
00:46:31According to the legend,
00:46:33Bigfoot of Fort Worth lives there.
00:46:37And this is also where
00:46:39curious people go
00:46:41to find evidence of the existence
00:46:43of the beast.
00:46:45It hides in the dark
00:46:47with its red eyes.
00:46:49It is the Butterfly Man,
00:46:51a humanoid creature
00:46:53seen in the 1960s
00:46:55in Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
00:46:57On a cold November night
00:46:59in 1966,
00:47:01two young couples say
00:47:03they saw a large gray creature
00:47:05with bright red eyes.
00:47:07It looked like a flying man
00:47:09with wings about 3 meters wide.
00:47:11The next two days,
00:47:13more and more people
00:47:15say they saw the same creature.
00:47:17Later, a biologist
00:47:19from the University of West Virginia
00:47:21reported to the newspaper
00:47:23that this description
00:47:25corresponded to that of Canada's crane.
00:47:27It is a large American bird
00:47:29Its wingspan is about 2 meters
00:47:31and it has red circles around its eyes.
00:47:33This bird probably found itself
00:47:35out of its migration route
00:47:37and was at the origin of these stories.
00:47:39Or maybe not.
00:47:41The Nightcrawlers of Fresno.
00:47:43They are not that big
00:47:45for monsters,
00:47:47about 1.5 meters.
00:47:49The upper part of their body
00:47:51is rather small.
00:47:53Their legs are long.
00:47:55These creatures appeared twice.
00:47:57The first time,
00:47:59they were seen in Fresno, California.
00:48:01The second time,
00:48:03they were seen at Yosemite National Park,
00:48:05still in California.
00:48:07We can see them twice
00:48:09in poor quality videos,
00:48:11so it is impossible to give
00:48:13details on their torsos.
00:48:15They are thin and white creatures
00:48:17without arms.
00:48:19At least, we don't see them.
00:48:21They have small feet
00:48:23that look like poles.
00:48:25The Nightcrawlers of Fresno
00:48:27are hiding somewhere
00:48:29in the Colorado mountains,
00:48:31more precisely in the mountain
00:48:33Head of the Lizard.
00:48:35It is just south-west of Telluride.
00:48:37It is a kind of leviathan
00:48:39that lives in the ground.
00:48:41This mountain whale
00:48:43observes its environment
00:48:45with its piercing eyes
00:48:47from the top of the mountain.
00:48:49It clings to the top
00:48:51with its forked tail
00:48:53The creature lets go of the top
00:48:55and slides down the mountain
00:48:57with its mouth
00:48:59full of open teeth.
00:49:01It swallows everything on its way.
00:49:03Miners, tourists
00:49:05and farmers.
00:49:07It slides along the side
00:49:09of the mountain
00:49:11and destroys all the flora on its way.
00:49:13At least, that's what the legend says.
00:49:15Wow!
00:49:17For now, it is the creature
00:49:19that scares me the most.
00:49:21Altamaha
00:49:23Somewhere in the south-east of Georgia,
00:49:25near the mouth of the Altamaha river,
00:49:27a sea monster is hiding.
00:49:29It is one of the most important rivers
00:49:31in the state.
00:49:33It spills into the Atlantic Ocean.
00:49:35The whole surrounding area
00:49:37is composed of small islands,
00:49:39canals, digs, ponds, hectares of swamp
00:49:41and old rice crops.
00:49:43It is the perfect hiding place
00:49:45for an aquatic monster, isn't it?
00:49:47The legend says
00:49:49that this cryptid
00:49:51would have an ostrich body
00:49:53with a bone crest on its back.
00:49:55Thanks to its fins,
00:49:57this creature would swim like a dolphin.
00:49:59Its muzzle would look like
00:50:01that of a crocodile.
00:50:03It is said that it has pointed teeth
00:50:05and globular eyes.
00:50:07It would be green or gray
00:50:09with a white-yellow belly
00:50:11and would measure about 9 meters.
00:50:13There is no concrete proof
00:50:15of the existence of Altamaha,
00:50:17but its legend is hundreds of years old.
00:50:19At the time,
00:50:21people talked about a huge creature
00:50:23resembling a snake
00:50:25that whistled and screamed.
00:50:27The Loch Ness monster,
00:50:29born for friends.
00:50:33It was at the time of the Picts,
00:50:35an old Scottish tribe,
00:50:37that the legend was born.
00:50:39It developed in the 1930s
00:50:41when the construction of a road
00:50:43along the lake was completed.
00:50:47In April 1933,
00:50:49a couple noticed a large animal
00:50:51that looked like a prehistoric monster
00:50:53or a dragon.
00:50:55Most people imagine
00:50:57a plesiosaur,
00:50:59a sea dinosaur.
00:51:03The creature would have crossed the road
00:51:05in front of the couple
00:51:07and would have quickly hidden in the water.
00:51:09Later, the same year,
00:51:11some researchers found large footprints.
00:51:13These were traces of a solid creature
00:51:15that was about 6 meters long
00:51:17with soft feet.
00:51:19Traces of hippopotamus?
00:51:23In addition,
00:51:25researchers have shown
00:51:27that the lake water
00:51:29was not rich enough
00:51:31to feed such a large predator.
00:51:33There are not enough animals.
00:51:35But the legend of this mythical creature
00:51:37has survived,
00:51:39and everywhere in the world
00:51:41we wonder
00:51:43what it is.
00:51:45Are you looking for something viscous?
00:51:47Many people tend to believe
00:51:49that snails are only limas
00:51:51with a shell.
00:51:53But even if they look a lot alike,
00:51:55they are completely different species.
00:51:57Limas do not need a protective shell
00:51:59because all their internal organs
00:52:01are, well, internal,
00:52:03that is, located inside
00:52:05their viscous body.
00:52:07They can compress and enter
00:52:09in difficult places to access.
00:52:11However, we often find limas
00:52:13in the most improbable places,
00:52:15such as under the bark of trees,
00:52:17or in tiny little holes,
00:52:19or at the library pretending
00:52:21to study for exams.
00:52:23However, snails are very dependent
00:52:25on their shell and cannot survive
00:52:27without it.
00:52:29Unlike the Bernard hermits,
00:52:31who renew their shell by growing up,
00:52:33snails are born with a shell
00:52:35on their back.
00:52:37Baby snails are also adorable
00:52:39because they calcify and become
00:52:41larger and more resistant with age.
00:52:43Many internal organs of snails
00:52:45are also inside the shell,
00:52:47which means that if it is crushed
00:52:49or damaged,
00:52:51the animal will probably not survive.
00:52:53However, a snail can repair
00:52:55the small cracks in its shell
00:52:57with protein and calcium
00:52:59secreted by its mantle.
00:53:01Turtles are also very close
00:53:03to snails in this regard
00:53:05because unlike common hermits,
00:53:07they can also leave their shell
00:53:09on a whim.
00:53:11The shell of a turtle is an integral part
00:53:13of its body, and even if the reptile
00:53:15can hide its head and legs inside
00:53:17to protect itself from predators,
00:53:19its skeleton is fused with the hard shell.
00:53:21And like the skeleton of any other animal,
00:53:23it grows with the turtle itself.
00:53:25Koalas only eat
00:53:27eucalyptus leaves,
00:53:29but there are more than 600
00:53:31different varieties,
00:53:33and koalas only eat 30,
00:53:3580% of what is available on the menu.
00:53:37So it must be a very specific
00:53:39eucalyptus so that a difficult
00:53:41koala can accommodate it.
00:53:43These adorable creatures also have
00:53:45something in common with cats.
00:53:47They sleep 18 to 20 hours a day.
00:53:49Polar bears are not white.
00:53:51Their skin is black under their fur,
00:53:53but they need the white color
00:53:55to camouflage themselves while hunting.
00:53:57The black color absorbs the sun
00:53:59better than anything else,
00:54:01while the white fur does not stop
00:54:03the rays crossing it.
00:54:05In a way, a polar bear
00:54:07has a rather transparent fur.
00:54:09There is a myth that
00:54:11cats and dogs see the world
00:54:13in black and white.
00:54:15In reality, they simply cannot
00:54:17distinguish certain colors.
00:54:19Nobody knows exactly how dogs see.
00:54:21Some think they only distinguish
00:54:23two colors. It could be blue
00:54:25and yellow, for what we know.
00:54:27But they can perceive the shades
00:54:29of other colors better than humans.
00:54:31Cats have a wonderful
00:54:33night vision. They need
00:54:35about seven times less light
00:54:37than humans to see in the dark.
00:54:39We thought giraffes
00:54:41were silent, but we recently
00:54:43discovered that they emitted
00:54:45low-frequency sounds at night
00:54:47to communicate with each other.
00:54:49During the day, they do not say a word
00:54:51and mutually warn of danger
00:54:53in a very unusual way,
00:54:55by moving their very developed eyebrows.
00:54:57It is likely that at night
00:54:59to distinguish the eyebrows of their
00:55:01congeners is why they start talking
00:55:03for good. Still about giraffes,
00:55:05these animals sleep well more than
00:55:0730 minutes a day, but probably
00:55:09not as much as you. Their sleeping
00:55:11rhythm is quite typical. After
00:55:13watching a herd of giraffes,
00:55:15researchers discovered that they slept
00:55:17at night and took short naps
00:55:19in the afternoon. In total,
00:55:21each giraffe has about 5 hours of sleep
00:55:23a day. And besides, a herd of
00:55:25giraffes is actually called a
00:55:27giraffe. It is quite logical, knowing
00:55:29that they have such a long neck.
00:55:31Seagulls can drink salty water.
00:55:33They have glands secreting
00:55:35salt near their eyes.
00:55:37These glands quickly purify sea water
00:55:39and the salty residue
00:55:41comes out through their nostrils.
00:55:43Salty morph in a way.
00:55:45Adélie's chubs are truly romantic.
00:55:47They have only one partner
00:55:49for life. Neumann offers a
00:55:51smooth stone to the female to found
00:55:53a family, a bit like a ring
00:55:55in Versailles. But as in humans,
00:55:57the female penguin
00:55:59can refuse the gift.
00:56:01Speaking of animal love,
00:56:03foxes are also romantic.
00:56:05Males make good father and husband.
00:56:07They are dedicated to their loved ones for life.
00:56:09They take care of females and even
00:56:11remove the cubs from their fur.
00:56:13They improve the terrier and actively
00:56:15participate in the education of their young.
00:56:17Dolphins can sleep with one eye
00:56:19closed and the other open.
00:56:21Half of the brain rests and dreams
00:56:23while the other half scans the environment
00:56:25in search of signs of danger.
00:56:27The perfect brain to sleep
00:56:29during classes and boring meetings.
00:56:31In addition, dolphins
00:56:33manually control their breathing.
00:56:35If both parts of their brain slept
00:56:37at the same time, they could simply
00:56:39drown. Sea otters
00:56:41are the most adorable sleepers
00:56:43of the animal kingdom.
00:56:45In summer, because of the heat,
00:56:47sea otters spend all their time in the water.
00:56:49They swim on their back and sleep in this position.
00:56:51Babies sleep on their mother's belly
00:56:53and adults stand on their legs
00:56:55so as not to be separated
00:56:57by the currents.
00:56:59Sea otters do not put their heads
00:57:01in the sand when they feel threatened.
00:57:03In fact, they never put their heads in the sand.
00:57:05This myth spread
00:57:07because of the famous expression
00:57:09make the policy of the sea otter.
00:57:11In reality, sea otters
00:57:13dig holes in the sand for their eggs
00:57:15because they are birds unable to fly.
00:57:17To ensure that they are
00:57:19evenly heated,
00:57:21sea otters dive their heads in
00:57:23to turn the eggs from time to time.
00:57:25But these animals still have
00:57:27a certain propensity for flight.
00:57:29When they face a threat,
00:57:31they can let themselves fall on the sand
00:57:33and remain perfectly still,
00:57:35pretending not to be alive.
00:57:37According to a popular belief,
00:57:39sea otters could only breathe by moving
00:57:41because swimming helps them push
00:57:43the water through their gills.
00:57:45Although many types of sea otters
00:57:47are naturally designed in this way,
00:57:49many others, like sea otters
00:57:51that swim in the deep sea,
00:57:53do not need to swim to pump
00:57:55rich water into their gills.
00:57:57However, all sea otters
00:57:59are devoid of swimming gills,
00:58:01so if they stop swimming,
00:58:03they will probably sink to the bottom of the water.
00:58:05But fortunately, the body of a sea otter
00:58:07cannot be compressed.
00:58:09This is why descents or quick climbs
00:58:11are safe for them.
00:58:13Scientists in Japan have listened
00:58:15to cats' puppies to prove
00:58:17that they were really sea otters.
00:58:19In these recordings,
00:58:21the owners of the cats called them by their name.
00:58:23The cats' puppies spread out
00:58:25and the animals moved their tails,
00:58:27their paws or their ears.
00:58:29They heard the calls,
00:58:31but they rarely answered.
00:58:33It's a matter of evolution.
00:58:35Cats became close to humans
00:58:37because they were attracted
00:58:39by the mice that ate our cereals.
00:58:41They lived with people
00:58:43Birds are actually among
00:58:45the last survivors of dinosaurs.
00:58:47They evolved from theropods,
00:58:49the dinosaurs that ran on two legs.
00:58:51So technically, the T-Rex
00:58:53is a distant cousin of the chicken,
00:58:55ostrich and even hummingbird.
00:58:57In reality, pink flames are white,
00:58:59but they take this pink hue
00:59:01thanks to the beta-carotene,
00:59:03a pigment found in the algae
00:59:05and shrimps they feed on.
00:59:07You too can change the color of your skin.
00:59:09If you eat a lot of carrots,
00:59:11it will happen
00:59:13because of the strong beta-carotene
00:59:15in vegetables.
00:59:17Sailors from all over the world
00:59:19talked about giant squid
00:59:21they encountered during their trip.
00:59:23For many years, scientists
00:59:25considered long-tentacled monsters
00:59:27to be a myth.
00:59:29But in 2004, the first picture
00:59:31of a giant squid was made.
00:59:33They really exist.
00:59:35Scientists measured an animal
00:59:37of nearly 13 meters.
00:59:39The most attractive humans
00:59:41are those who have blood type O.
00:59:43In addition, these insects
00:59:45have a very good sight.
00:59:47They are attracted by green, black and red colors.
00:59:49So check the color of your clothes
00:59:51before going camping.
00:59:53You can put a squid in a trance
00:59:55for 15 minutes.
00:59:57To do this, you have to caress
00:59:59the animal's nose with your hand.
01:00:01This kind of hypnosis is called tonic immobility.
01:00:03It occurs thanks to the receptors
01:00:05present in the squid's nose.
01:00:07The receptors send many signals
01:00:09and the squid's brain is unable
01:00:11to treat them all.
01:00:13How are you supposed to get close
01:00:15to a squid enough to rub his nose?
01:00:17Elephants are not afraid of mice.
01:00:19But these massive animals
01:00:21have a bad sight and move
01:00:23quite slowly.
01:00:25That's why they can be frightened
01:00:27by a bird or a small creature
01:00:29like a mouse passing in front of them.
01:00:31It's just a surprise.
01:00:33The chameleon can change color
01:00:35to regulate his temperature
01:00:37and communicate with his peers.
01:00:39When most dogs breath,
01:00:41their tongues hang from their mouths.
01:00:43That's why a lot of people
01:00:45think that's how they sweat.
01:00:47In fact, the dog's sudoriparous glands
01:00:49are located on their paws.
01:00:51In addition, there are other
01:00:53sudoriparous glands all over their body.
01:00:55Dogs breathe to evaporate
01:00:57the humidity of their nasal voice,
01:00:59their tongue and the wall
01:01:01of their lungs.
01:01:03This also helps them to cool down.
01:01:05You should probably leave the geese alone,
01:01:07but don't be so sure
01:01:09that they will do the same with you.
01:01:11Bees respect your limits
01:01:13and if you don't bother them,
01:01:15they won't hurt you.
01:01:17But geese, for their part,
01:01:19are sometimes in such a bad mood
01:01:21that they can sting you
01:01:23even if you just pass by their nest.
01:01:25Your dog doesn't really have
01:01:27a more developed sense of smell than yours.
01:01:29It is often said that dogs
01:01:31don't smell.
01:01:33And it probably started
01:01:35when a 19th century researcher
01:01:37called humans
01:01:39non-sniffers.
01:01:41No one has ever provided sensory tests
01:01:43to test this theory,
01:01:45but people have believed it for a long time.
01:01:47The truth is that
01:01:49different types of animals can identify
01:01:51different types of smells.
01:01:53An experiment was carried out
01:01:55in which human volunteers
01:01:57had to follow a trace smell.
01:01:59They put string in chocolate gas
01:02:01and put it in a zigzag on a lawn.
01:02:03Volunteers were not allowed
01:02:05to use other senses.
01:02:07Their ears were plugged,
01:02:09their eyes were blindfolded
01:02:11and they wore thick gloves and kneepads.
01:02:13The conclusion of this experiment
01:02:15was that even if we are not
01:02:17as efficient as dogs,
01:02:19we can follow a trace smell
01:02:21and even become much better
01:02:23if we train.
01:02:25It is interesting to note
01:02:27that dogs have the same sense of smell
01:02:29as fruits or flowers.
01:02:31It is because during their evolution
01:02:33dogs did not need to disguise
01:02:35their smell for these types of smells.
01:02:37A television screen
01:02:39does not reduce your vision.
01:02:41At least there is no evidence
01:02:43that watching a television screen
01:02:45can really hurt your eyes.
01:02:47It is the same for
01:02:49mobile screens or computers.
01:02:51Watching them can actually
01:02:53cause eye fatigue,
01:02:55but it does not mean
01:02:57that watching television
01:02:59or putting your phone down
01:03:01for too long does not have
01:03:03negative consequences
01:03:05on other aspects of your life,
01:03:07such as a decrease in concentration
01:03:09and a lack of socialization, among others.
01:03:11Being able to roll up your tongue
01:03:13is not really a genetic trait,
01:03:15even if biology teachers
01:03:17often say that this gift
01:03:19rests on a dominant gene.
01:03:21A study showed that 7 twins out of 33
01:03:23have the same gene,
01:03:25which implies that they
01:03:27should also share this trait.
01:03:29But this is not the case,
01:03:31which means that genes
01:03:33are probably not the factor
01:03:35that decides if you will be able
01:03:37to roll up your tongue.
01:03:39But this myth still exists,
01:03:41even if it was demystified
01:03:43more than six decades ago.
01:03:45You will catch a cold
01:03:47if you go out with wet hair.
01:03:49It's still a myth.
01:03:51People believe it
01:03:53because 1.
01:03:55they heard it from their parents
01:03:57and 2.
01:03:59they associate going out
01:04:01with wet hair
01:04:03with getting sick,
01:04:05because we are generally
01:04:07more exposed to microbes
01:04:09when we are outside.
01:04:11There is no one
01:04:13whose joints go both ways.
01:04:15Some people
01:04:17actually have very flexible
01:04:19joints,
01:04:21which allows them
01:04:23to touch their chin
01:04:25with their elbow
01:04:27or to bend their finger
01:04:29backwards.
01:04:31This is sometimes called
01:04:33double joint,
01:04:35as if the secret
01:04:37was in an additional hinge
01:04:39somewhere.
01:04:41But this is not the case.
01:04:43These people have simple joints,
01:04:45but their bones
01:04:47have a useless intestinal tube
01:04:49that goes almost nowhere.
01:04:51The appendix could actually
01:04:53be a reservoir of bacteria,
01:04:55but a good and useful reservoir.
01:04:57It stores microbes
01:04:59that help our body
01:05:01when it struggles
01:05:03against certain problems and diseases.
01:05:05At the beginning of our life,
01:05:07the appendix also helps us
01:05:09in the process of forming
01:05:11white blood cells
01:05:13and certain types of antibodies.
01:05:15But no, it is probably
01:05:17not where you think it is.
01:05:19Most people think it hides
01:05:21somewhere behind the navel.
01:05:23In fact, it is a little higher
01:05:25in the abdomen,
01:05:27placed on the rest of the intestine.
01:05:29Here's how to find it.
01:05:31Look for the point
01:05:33where your lower ribs
01:05:35meet in the middle.
01:05:37Now go down about
01:05:39three fingers wide,
01:05:41then three on your left.
01:05:44This cartography of the tongue
01:05:46probably appeared in the early 20th century
01:05:48because scientists discovered
01:05:50subtle differences in the intensity
01:05:52that a taste should have
01:05:54to be detected in different areas
01:05:56of the mouth.
01:05:58This study gave rise to a myth
01:06:00that each part of the tongue
01:06:02was responsible for different tastes.
01:06:04In fact, all types of taste buds
01:06:06are distributed in all areas of the mouth,
01:06:08and they can detect each taste.
01:06:10This also includes umami,
01:06:12which today has its place
01:06:14among the four traditional tastes
01:06:16sweet, salty, bitter and acid.
01:06:18We don't use just 10% of our brain,
01:06:20we use a lot more,
01:06:22even when we sleep.
01:06:24Scientists tested this statement
01:06:26and one of the methods they used
01:06:28was to measure brain activity
01:06:30while a person was doing various tasks.
01:06:32The results showed
01:06:34that we use most of our brain
01:06:36most of the time.
01:06:38The exact percentage varies
01:06:40from person to person
01:06:42depending on what they do.
01:06:44In addition, it is not possible
01:06:46to monitor each of our brain cells.
01:06:48There are billions of them,
01:06:50so we can't really know
01:06:52the exact number of active cells
01:06:54at some point.
01:06:56When you sleep,
01:06:58your frontal cortex,
01:07:00the part responsible for high-level thinking,
01:07:02and some areas that help you
01:07:04perceive your environment,
01:07:06still work.
01:07:08This idea comes from Aristotle,
01:07:10the famous Greek philosopher,
01:07:12who said that there was
01:07:14a sensory organ for each sense,
01:07:16eyes to see,
01:07:18a tongue to taste,
01:07:20and so on.
01:07:22But it was thousands of years ago
01:07:24and he lacked the knowledge
01:07:26of the vestibular system,
01:07:28a key sensory organ.
01:07:30The vestibular system
01:07:32is the internal ear device
01:07:34that our body uses
01:07:36to control its own sensory organ,
01:07:38but simply a different type of receiver.
01:07:40For example, your skin
01:07:42has four different sensory receptors
01:07:44for temperature,
01:07:46touch, pain,
01:07:48and proprioception.
01:07:50The latter is the consciousness
01:07:52of your body in space,
01:07:54which means that even if you move
01:07:56your arm behind your back,
01:07:58you still know it's there.
01:08:00So, to say that we have
01:08:0233 senses rather than 5
01:08:04is not true.
01:08:06These are the senses of balance,
01:08:08temperature, thirst,
01:08:10and many others that we need
01:08:12to survive.
01:08:14If you like cracking your joints
01:08:16from time to time,
01:08:18don't worry.
01:08:20The idea that this increases
01:08:22the risk of potential problems
01:08:24in the joints seems logical,
01:08:26because that's what happens
01:08:28when you exert constant pressure
01:08:30on your joints over the years.
01:08:32If you eat a big meal,
01:08:34you can still go swimming.
01:08:36You won't have cramps.
01:08:38The principle behind this idea
01:08:40is that eating a meal
01:08:42increases the amount of blood
01:08:44flowing to your stomach.
01:08:46So the blood doesn't go
01:08:48to your muscles,
01:08:50which can cause cramps
01:08:52if you go swimming.
01:08:54In fact, you probably won't feel
01:08:56as comfortable swimming
01:08:58immediately after eating a meal,
01:09:00but you can feel safe
01:09:02if you really want to.
01:09:04It's even recommended
01:09:06to have a small,
01:09:08high-calorie meal
01:09:10shortly before a swimming session.
01:09:12This will give you a boost of energy.
01:09:14When you shave your body hair,
01:09:16you shouldn't worry
01:09:18that it grows darker and thicker.
01:09:20It's another myth.
01:09:22You may feel that there are
01:09:24changes in color,
01:09:26thickness,
01:09:28which may seem darker
01:09:30and rougher than before.
01:09:32But you'll see that once your hair
01:09:34has grown back,
01:09:36they'll be the same as before.
01:09:38It's not true to say
01:09:40that we lose a disproportionate
01:09:42amount of body heat by the head.
01:09:44You may feel that way
01:09:46because your head,
01:09:48chest and face
01:09:50are clearly more sensitive
01:09:52to temperature changes.
01:09:54In fact, you'd be just as cold
01:09:56You probably feel like
01:09:58you're losing body heat by the head
01:10:00because it's often one of the parts
01:10:02you don't notice when you go out.
01:10:04Don't worry if you wake up
01:10:06sleepy. It doesn't put your
01:10:08health at risk.
01:10:10If you overdo it,
01:10:12it can be disoriented
01:10:14and have a confused reaction.
01:10:16But it's sometimes better to wake him up
01:10:18than to let him do certain things
01:10:20he shouldn't during his sleep.
01:10:22Like cooking or driving.
01:10:24Or you can simply show him
01:10:26the way back to his bed.
01:10:28This large, flat hat
01:10:30has almost become the trademark
01:10:32of every cowboy who respects
01:10:34himself in popular culture,
01:10:36even if no one actually wore it
01:10:38at the time of the conquest of the West.
01:10:40Cowboys, or rather bovvies,
01:10:42were mostly simple farm boys
01:10:44who were made to do the dirty work
01:10:46in dirty guineas,
01:10:48while these hats were expensive,
01:10:50really expensive.
01:10:52The large hats were not practical
01:10:54because they were heavy and annoying.
01:10:56Most cowboys preferred
01:10:58lighter melon hats.
01:11:00But imagine the legendary Clint Eastwood
01:11:02staring at you under the edge
01:11:04of his melon hat.
01:11:06No, it's better to keep the hats
01:11:08on the wide side than in the westerns.
01:11:10How do firefighters extinguish
01:11:12fires so quickly?
01:11:14Is their water more wet or something like that?
01:11:16Well, actually, yes, it is.
01:11:18It's a fairly recent improvement,
01:11:20some water-reactive
01:11:22to reduce its surface tension.
01:11:24As a result, it spreads more easily
01:11:26and impregnates objects better.
01:11:28The discovery of a pot of millenary honey
01:11:30perfectly edible during archaeological
01:11:32excavations gave birth to a myth
01:11:34according to which honey
01:11:36can never be spoiled.
01:11:38If you buy honey, remove the lid
01:11:40and store it in a humid environment,
01:11:42it will deteriorate quite quickly.
01:11:44However, it is true
01:11:46that honey has antibacterial
01:11:48and antifungal properties,
01:11:50so that no germ can live there
01:11:52if stored properly.
01:11:54With a closed lid and a dry environment,
01:11:56it should not deteriorate from your living.
01:11:58You may have heard
01:12:00that the pink tint of your
01:12:02strawberry frappuccino
01:12:04is obtained thanks to crushed insects.
01:12:06It was true until 2012.
01:12:08Small animals called
01:12:10piglets were mined
01:12:12to make red dye.
01:12:14This method is still used
01:12:16by many companies,
01:12:18but you will no longer find insects
01:12:20in your coffee.
01:12:22Good news, isn't it?
01:12:24You probably heard
01:12:26that Albert Einstein was
01:12:28very bad at math at school.
01:12:30To all those who think
01:12:32they can match his genius
01:12:34even with bad grades,
01:12:36sorry!
01:12:38When he was told this story
01:12:40in 1935,
01:12:42Einstein simply laughed
01:12:44at the myth.
01:12:46The myth was invented in the 1930s
01:12:48by Replace Believe It or Not,
01:12:50believe it or not,
01:12:52a newspaper dealing with bizarre facts.
01:12:54The problem is that it never mentioned
01:12:56credible meaning,
01:12:58so not a single statement
01:13:00on Einstein resisted.
01:13:02When people say that their sixth sense
01:13:04has told them something,
01:13:06it means something else
01:13:08than the usual senses
01:13:10such as touch, smell, taste, sight and hearing.
01:13:12There are several opinions
01:13:14on the real number of our senses.
01:13:16The highest today is 53.
01:13:18The proprioception, for example,
01:13:20is the perception of the position
01:13:22of your body in space.
01:13:24If you can close your eyes
01:13:26and touch your nose with a finger,
01:13:28congratulations, you got it!
01:13:30You probably heard a lot of stories
01:13:32about the hidden secrets
01:13:34of the dark side of the moon.
01:13:36The only problem is that
01:13:38this dark side of the moon
01:13:40does not exist.
01:13:42Our natural satellite
01:13:44is in synchronous rotation
01:13:46with the Earth,
01:13:48which means that we always see
01:13:50the same side of the star.
01:13:52But the sun does not follow the same rule
01:13:54and it also illuminates the other side
01:13:56of the moon like everything else.
01:13:58And it makes sense.
01:14:00Solar eclipses could not occur
01:14:02if the sun did not illuminate
01:14:04the other side of the moon.
01:14:06Indeed, it is precisely the moon
01:14:08that causes eclipses.
01:14:10Moreover, eclipses occur
01:14:12because the sun is 400 times
01:14:14further away from our planet
01:14:16than the moon.
01:14:18But it is also 400 times larger.
01:14:20The effect is therefore a total blockage
01:14:22of the solar rays,
01:14:24leaving only this disturbing
01:14:26luminous crown.
01:14:28If you like sushi,
01:14:30you may already know that the green paste
01:14:32with which they are usually served
01:14:34is not real wasabi.
01:14:36Real wasabi has a sweeter taste
01:14:38and it is also very expensive.
01:14:40It is also easy to know
01:14:42whether it is real or not.
01:14:44If it is not made in front of you,
01:14:46then it is not wasabi.
01:14:48Speaking of whales,
01:14:50what we are about to do,
01:14:52the blue whale is often considered
01:14:54to be the largest living being
01:14:56that has ever lived.
01:14:58And it is true that this nice giant
01:15:00is immense.
01:15:02But alas, it is not even close
01:15:04to the honey bee that lives
01:15:06in the Blue Mountains of Oregon.
01:15:08By looking at it from the surface,
01:15:10you cannot say that you are looking
01:15:12at something massive.
01:15:14In fact, it is a single mushroom
01:15:16that covers an area
01:15:18of 1,350 football fields,
01:15:20most of which are underground.
01:15:22In addition, it is not just old,
01:15:24it is very old.
01:15:26Its age is estimated at 2,400 years.
01:15:28But it could reach 8,650 years.
01:15:30No one can say with certainty.
01:15:32The poor blue whale is not even
01:15:34second in the ranking.
01:15:36This honor comes back to Pando,
01:15:38the shaking giant.
01:15:40It is a false-trembling poplar
01:15:42from the south center of Utah
01:15:44that looks like a huge forest
01:15:46but is actually a single organism.
01:15:48All trees in an area of 0.4 square kilometers
01:15:50grow from a single root system.
01:15:52But what is even more amazing
01:15:54than its size is the weight of Pando.
01:15:56Together, its roots and trees
01:15:58weigh about 6,000 tons.
01:16:00Which is actually the heaviest organism
01:16:02that exists.
01:16:04It may be easy to deflate your tires
01:16:06when you are stuck in the snow.
01:16:08But driving like that when you are out of danger
01:16:10is an unreasonable risk.
01:16:12Deflated tires decrease
01:16:14your level of control on the car,
01:16:16especially on an icy road,
01:16:18and you are more likely to get stuck again.
01:16:20So instead of deflating
01:16:22the tires of your car deliberately
01:16:24in winter, make sure you have
01:16:26chains or crampons for better grip
01:16:28and put some essential elements
01:16:30in your trunk to help you
01:16:32in case of problems.
01:16:34The basic kit could include a shovel,
01:16:36a tow rope and a bag of sand,
01:16:38salt or, if you don't have any,
01:16:40litter for cats.
01:16:42It's better if it's made of minerals,
01:16:44but even silicone will do the trick.
01:16:46Diamonds are very special precious stones
01:16:48and their cost is justified
01:16:50by their beauty and rarity, isn't it?
01:16:52Not exactly.
01:16:54In fact, they are not as rare
01:16:56as we were led to believe,
01:16:58and scientists even found a way
01:17:00to create artificial diamonds,
01:17:02which makes their production rather easy.
01:17:04But they are still very expensive.
01:17:06Their success comes partly from myths
01:17:08and legends about precious stones
01:17:10that go back far back in time.
01:17:12But more recently,
01:17:14in the last century,
01:17:16it is mainly thanks to very effective
01:17:18advertising campaigns that the great monopolies
01:17:20of the diamond market have managed
01:17:22to convince the planet of the rarity
01:17:24of precious stones,
01:17:26by making unique symbols of romance
01:17:28and commitment.
01:17:30Even if bats are disoriented
01:17:32to the light of day,
01:17:34it's not because they are blind.
01:17:36In fact, their sight is even better
01:17:38than ours at night.
01:17:40They simply see everything in shades
01:17:42of black and white.
01:17:44It is therefore difficult for them
01:17:46to orient themselves when there is
01:17:48so much light around them.
01:17:50The myth that bats are blind
01:17:52is probably not necessary to tell you
01:17:54that our planet is not round.
01:17:56Its shape even has a special name,
01:17:58a geoid.
01:18:00But to say that it is closer
01:18:02to an elliptical shape
01:18:04or another appropriate shape
01:18:06would also be incorrect.
01:18:08The Earth constantly rotates
01:18:10at an amazing speed,
01:18:12which gives it a shape
01:18:14a bit like the voids,
01:18:16it's true.
01:18:18But the tectonic plates
01:18:20make the surface of the Earth
01:18:22rise in some places
01:18:24and sink in others.
01:18:26Finally, the planet looks more like
01:18:28a deformed ball than anything else.
01:18:30One of the most widespread
01:18:32popular beliefs is
01:18:34that the mouse loves cheese.
01:18:36This myth appeared a long time ago,
01:18:38as soon as people
01:18:40started storing food.
01:18:42As mice are regular visitors
01:18:44to human houses,
01:18:46they were constantly
01:18:48looking for food.
01:18:50People used to store
01:18:52cereals in jars.
01:18:54They suspended the meat,
01:18:56but they put the cheese on a shelf.
01:18:58So mice ate it
01:19:00for the better,
01:19:02and they will tend to attack
01:19:04chocolate or another sweet product
01:19:06than cheese.
01:19:08I understand them a bit.
01:19:10Pink flames do not stay in the water
01:19:12on a dough so as not to get cold.
01:19:14It's just a simpler way
01:19:16to provide less effort.
01:19:18It's exhausting for us
01:19:20to stand on one leg,
01:19:22but for them,
01:19:24it's the most stable position
01:19:26given their anatomy.
01:19:28This pose does not require
01:19:30any muscle work.
01:19:32One of the most widespread beliefs
01:19:34is that ostriches
01:19:36bury their heads in the ground
01:19:38when they are afraid.
01:19:40Before, scientists thought
01:19:42that ostriches were not very smart
01:19:44to bury their heads
01:19:46without realizing that the rest
01:19:48of their huge body
01:19:50was visible to everyone's eyes.
01:19:52In fact, ostriches do it
01:19:54when they want to swallow
01:19:56sand and pebbles
01:19:58to stimulate their digestion
01:20:00or simply to return
01:20:02the eggs they laid in their nests.
01:20:04And technically,
01:20:06they do not even bury their heads,
01:20:08but lay them near the ground.
01:20:10If they put their heads in the sand,
01:20:12it's no reason to think
01:20:14that the ostrich is fearful.
01:20:16Like many other animals,
01:20:18it will run away
01:20:20if it feels a danger coming
01:20:22or if it knows how to defend itself.
01:20:24What do you think
01:20:26is the biggest thing
01:20:28a blue whale can swallow?
01:20:30I'm talking about the biggest animal
01:20:32that has ever lived on our planet.
01:20:34It can measure up to 30 meters long
01:20:36and weigh 200 tons.
01:20:38Its heart is as big as a car
01:20:40or as big as an elephant.
01:20:42We easily imagine a blue whale
01:20:44swallowing cars, people
01:20:46and even small boats.
01:20:48But it's wrong.
01:20:50The biggest thing it can really swallow
01:20:52is a grapefruit.
01:20:54Its throat can fit
01:20:56a small salad plate.
01:20:58Whales eat small fish,
01:21:00plankton and crustaceans.
01:21:02So they don't need a huge throat.
01:21:04However, we could not survive
01:21:06the gastric juice of a blue whale.
01:21:08It would die in 15 seconds.
01:21:10That's about the time
01:21:12we could spend in space.
01:21:14Dromedaries don't store water
01:21:16in their mouths.
01:21:18These animals can resist
01:21:20extreme conditions.
01:21:22If they can survive
01:21:24only once every 8 to 10 days,
01:21:26it's not because they have
01:21:28a secret reservoir in their backs,
01:21:30but because when they drink,
01:21:32they can swallow
01:21:34almost 200 liters of water at once.
01:21:36That's the amount they can lose
01:21:38by dehydration.
01:21:40So they lose a lot of water,
01:21:42but they regain it quickly.
01:21:44Their stomach is actually
01:21:46a stock of fat.
01:21:48The oxygen inhaled by dromedaries
01:21:50could make them lose too much water
01:21:52because it evaporates in the lungs.
01:21:54However, they use their fat
01:21:56as a nutritional energy source.
01:21:58This helps them survive
01:22:00in arid regions and in times of famine.
01:22:02The ant-eater doesn't really
01:22:04have a long nose.
01:22:06This giant animal has a very long tongue
01:22:08that can be up to 60 cm long.
01:22:10It looks like a spaghetti
01:22:12and is covered with spiny hooks
01:22:14and sticky saliva
01:22:16that traps ants.
01:22:18It can spit it out
01:22:20up to 160 times per minute,
01:22:22which means it can eat
01:22:24up to 20,000 insects in one day.
01:22:26It opens its jaws with its claws
01:22:28and then finishes the job
01:22:30with its tongue.
01:22:32The cinema could give you
01:22:34a false sense of security
01:22:36when it comes to dinosaurs.
01:22:38Staying still in front of a T-Rex
01:22:40won't save you.
01:22:42Claiming that the king of dinosaurs
01:22:44had a very bad eyesight
01:22:46is just a myth.
01:22:48He saw as well as today's raptors.
01:22:50He had an excellent perception
01:22:52of the depth,
01:22:54a capacity present
01:22:56in eagles and current falcons.
01:22:58And even if by miracle
01:23:00he didn't see you
01:23:02or thought you were just a shrub
01:23:04because you stayed still,
01:23:06know that he also had a very good sense of smell.
01:23:08So the best option would be to run
01:23:10because the T-Rex is not as fast
01:23:12as scientists thought
01:23:14who estimated its top speed
01:23:16at 50 km per hour.
01:23:18In view of its anatomy,
01:23:20it could barely reach
01:23:2220 km per hour.
01:23:24Running faster would have caused
01:23:26serious bone injuries,
01:23:28but it didn't stop it from reigning
01:23:30over the animal world
01:23:32because many dinosaurs were slower than it.
01:23:34So they had no trouble feeding themselves.
01:23:36Another well-received idea
01:23:38states that owls
01:23:40can turn their heads 360 degrees.
01:23:42Their rotation angle
01:23:44is limited to 270 degrees
01:23:46in each direction,
01:23:48which gives them an amplitude
01:23:50of movement of 540 degrees.
01:23:52Don't worry if you touch
01:23:54the wings of a butterfly.
01:23:56It will not be able to fly.
01:23:58It will survive despite the ideas received.
01:24:00Butterfly wings have scales.
01:24:02When you touch them,
01:24:04some can come off,
01:24:06but it doesn't necessarily matter
01:24:08because they come off naturally.
01:24:10It is thanks to these scales
01:24:12that butterflies can sometimes escape
01:24:14if they are stuck in a spider web.
01:24:16The following myth
01:24:18has inspired many films,
01:24:20books and series.
01:24:22But no, wolves don't howl at the moon.
01:24:24Wolves howl at night,
01:24:26but only because it is the period
01:24:28when they are the most active.
01:24:30They raise their heads
01:24:32because it helps the sound to spread.
01:24:34Other wolves can also hear them
01:24:36up to a distance of 10 to 15 km.
01:24:38That's why they howl,
01:24:40to communicate with each other.
01:24:42They emit specific sounds
01:24:44in each situation,
01:24:46for example to help a wolf
01:24:48who has lost his leash to find his way.
01:24:50The moon has nothing to do with that.
01:24:52It is said that giraffes
01:24:54need only 30 minutes of sleep a day.
01:24:56That's wrong.
01:24:58They sleep about 4.5 hours a day.
01:25:00This is not so unusual
01:25:02for the animal species
01:25:04that are the most active during the day.
01:25:06Studies have also shown
01:25:08that giraffes lay down
01:25:10to sleep less than 11 minutes each time.
01:25:12Many people think
01:25:14that toads are blind.
01:25:16In fact, these little mammals
01:25:18can see, but their sight is very weak
01:25:20and can only recognize light.
01:25:22They are also daltonian.
01:25:24When they look for food
01:25:26in the darkness of the basement,
01:25:28these creatures rely
01:25:30mainly on their touch and smell.
01:25:32Their sense of touch is very developed
01:25:34and allows them to feel
01:25:36the vibrations of the ground.
01:25:38This helps them to avoid danger
01:25:40or to find their meal more easily,
01:25:42which is composed of millipedes,
01:25:44worms and other invertebrates.
01:25:46They dig fast enough,
01:25:48the animals hibernate
01:25:50not because it is too cold
01:25:52to stay outside in winter,
01:25:54but because there is not enough food
01:25:56during this period.
01:25:58When an animal hibernates,
01:26:00its heart rate, temperature,
01:26:02breathing and other metabolic activities
01:26:04slow down considerably.
01:26:06They then conserve their energy.
01:26:08Tamas, bats, turtles
01:26:10and snakes hibernate during winter,
01:26:12which allows them to save energy
01:26:14for the other seasons
01:26:16and allow them to get food.
01:26:18If you think of bears,
01:26:20they are not real hibernators.
01:26:22And if you try to pet one
01:26:24during winter,
01:26:26you may be very surprised.
01:26:28They are slow.
01:26:30They sleep for long periods
01:26:32but they do not necessarily
01:26:34growl during the whole winter
01:26:36and you can easily wake them up
01:26:38during their sleep.
01:26:40And finally, eavesdroppers
01:26:42will not fall into your ears.
01:26:44At least, there is nothing
01:26:46to prove it.
01:26:48They prefer to spend their time
01:26:50in dark and humid places
01:26:52like under the bark of trees
01:26:54or in the ground.
01:26:56So be calm.
01:26:58So, what kind of fuel do you fill up?
01:27:00At the gas station,
01:27:02you probably noticed different indicators
01:27:04accompanied by numbers
01:27:06on the fuel pump buttons.
01:27:08These are the octane levels
01:27:10which vary from normal,
01:27:12to high,
01:27:14to low.
01:27:16Each one provides a different octane level
01:27:18which is necessary for your type of engine
01:27:20to work efficiently.
01:27:22Your choice must be based
01:27:24on the compression rate of your engine.
01:27:26Thus, the myth of the use of super fuel
01:27:28for a car that needs ordinary fuel
01:27:30to get better performance
01:27:32or to improve the health of the engine
01:27:34is false.
01:27:36It is better to stick to the recommended fuel
01:27:38for your car.
01:27:40This means that your fuel
01:27:42will not be more dense
01:27:44which will allow you to have more
01:27:46for your money.
01:27:48This is another false myth.
01:27:50Supply tanks are buried
01:27:52so deep underground
01:27:54that the temperature inside
01:27:56does not change at all.
01:27:58We have all heard that the toilet water
01:28:00works in the opposite direction
01:28:02in the different hemispheres.
01:28:04In the center of a watch,
01:28:06in the north,
01:28:08the flow should move the water
01:28:10in this direction.
01:28:12But in reality, the water that flows
01:28:14is only influenced by the way it is evacuated.
01:28:16And the direction of the flow
01:28:18does not depend on the place.
01:28:20You are caught in a storm
01:28:22and there is no shelter around you.
01:28:24The lightning strikes all of a sudden
01:28:26and your first reaction is to run
01:28:28to the place where it just struck.
01:28:30After all, lightning never strikes twice
01:28:32in the same place, does it?
01:28:34This is false.
01:28:36It may be a sign
01:28:38that this is a risky place.
01:28:40This area can easily be hit again.
01:28:42It is better to find a shelter
01:28:44and stay away from metal objects.
01:28:46Eating before swimming
01:28:48has always been considered dangerous.
01:28:50People thought it caused cramps,
01:28:52but it is not true.
01:28:54The only negative effect of swimming
01:28:56after a meal is suffocation.
01:28:58Just make sure to stay in the deeper waters
01:29:00while you digest your meal.
01:29:02It is often said that the Great Wall of China
01:29:04is visible from space,
01:29:06but there are no buildings on Earth
01:29:08that can be visible at this distance.
01:29:10On the other hand,
01:29:12you can see the lights on Earth at night.
01:29:14Albert Einstein,
01:29:16the greatest physicist of all time,
01:29:18was often reported
01:29:20for his poor math skills.
01:29:22People said he had failed
01:29:24this subject at school.
01:29:26But even if Einstein
01:29:28failed an entrance exam,
01:29:30he was actually really good at math
01:29:32at the age of 12.
01:29:34Spring is in the air.
01:29:36Unfortunately,
01:29:38it is not the best time for baby birds.
01:29:40They tend to fall from their nests.
01:29:42Sometimes they find themselves
01:29:44in a dangerous place
01:29:46and must be taken to a safer place.
01:29:48But they have probably been told
01:29:50that if someone touches them,
01:29:52their mother will no longer want
01:29:54to take care of her babies.
01:29:56In reality,
01:29:58birds have a very bad smell
01:30:00and they can't fly if necessary.
01:30:02Given the size of our brain,
01:30:04it is a shame that we only use
01:30:0610% of its capacities.
01:30:08Another myth.
01:30:10In reality, you use your brain as much as possible,
01:30:12but different parts of it
01:30:14work at different times of the day.
01:30:16There was a time
01:30:18when heating your car in the cold
01:30:20was a necessity.
01:30:22And some people think it's still true.
01:30:24But today we use different cars.
01:30:26And it's worse for the car
01:30:28because it can't run for too long.
01:30:30As for the temperature,
01:30:3230 seconds is enough.
01:30:34An old saying says
01:30:36that bats have a bad sight.
01:30:38But it couldn't be more wrong.
01:30:40Not only do they use their eyes,
01:30:42which is extraordinary,
01:30:44but they can also see quite well.
01:30:46In fact, they see better than us humans
01:30:48at dusk and dawn.
01:30:50Watching TV or setting up your computer
01:30:52doesn't give you square eyes
01:30:54and doesn't damage them.
01:30:56You just clean them after a while.
01:30:58But as long as you clean your eyes enough
01:31:00to not let them dry out,
01:31:02everything will be fine.
01:31:04Calvitis is a natural phenomenon in humans.
01:31:06Shampoo, gels, sun rays,
01:31:08hats and testosterone levels
01:31:10were all responsible
01:31:12for the early loss of hair.
01:31:14But the natural loss of hair
01:31:16is purely hereditary.
01:31:18It can come from both sides of the family,
01:31:20but mainly from the genes of the father.
01:31:22It happened to all of us
01:31:24when we swallowed chewing gum,
01:31:26either by accident
01:31:28or when there was no table
01:31:30under which to stick it.
01:31:32Don't worry,
01:31:34it won't reappear in 7 years.
01:31:36Your stomach will digest it easily
01:31:38and make it go away directly.
01:31:40Basically, buying make-up
01:31:42is an excellent way to save money
01:31:44because make-up is supposed to never expire.
01:31:46But it's wrong.
01:31:48It can develop bacteria
01:31:50that will have a negative effect on your skin.
01:31:52Another myth about make-up
01:31:54is that it's harmful for the skin.
01:31:56But in reality,
01:31:58it's completely normal
01:32:00and can protect your skin from pollution.
01:32:02Just don't forget to remove it every day.
01:32:04Vikings have always been admired
01:32:06and popular
01:32:08in the cultures of the whole world.
01:32:10They have been represented
01:32:12as brave warriors
01:32:14wearing helmets with horns.
01:32:16But the truth is
01:32:18they never had horns.
01:32:20It was an opera composed by Wagner
01:32:22in the 19th century.
01:32:24And since then,
01:32:26horns have been associated with Vikings.
01:32:28You may have been told
01:32:30not to wear red in the presence of bulls.
01:32:32But in reality,
01:32:34it doesn't matter what you wear
01:32:36because these animals don't see color.
01:32:38They are usually provoked
01:32:40by a general movement.
01:32:42Dogs, on the other hand,
01:32:44can see colors,
01:32:46but the way they do it
01:32:48doesn't matter.
01:32:50As the colors of the bird
01:32:52correspond to those of the ground,
01:32:54they easily blend into their environment.
01:32:56At the same time,
01:32:58ostriches often seem to have their heads
01:33:00stuck in the ground.
01:33:02But that's not the case.
01:33:04Ostriches couldn't breathe
01:33:06if that was really what they were doing.
01:33:08The Scottish Highlands
01:33:10are synonymous with beautiful landscapes,
01:33:12kilt, and the soothing sound
01:33:14of the horn.
01:33:16The horn has been used for the first time
01:33:18in the Middle Ages,
01:33:20centuries before anyone in Europe
01:33:22had the opportunity to annoy their neighbors
01:33:24by playing this unusual instrument.
01:33:26During deep sleep,
01:33:28you breathe heavily
01:33:30and can accidentally suck all kinds of things
01:33:32into your mouth.
01:33:34That's why you swallow an average of seven spiders a year.
01:33:36That's what they say,
01:33:38but it's not possible.
01:33:40A spider can't find anything less attractive
01:33:42than a huge piece of human
01:33:44that doesn't come close to your mouth.
01:33:46Your nails don't grow at the same speed.
01:33:48The more your hand or finger is used,
01:33:50the more it promotes nail growth.
01:33:52That's why the nails of your dominant hand
01:33:54grow faster than those of the other.
01:33:56Ninjas didn't have just one color
01:33:58for their famous ninja uniform.
01:34:00Of course, black was the best
01:34:02to blend into the crowd at night,
01:34:04but they also had a wardrobe
01:34:06containing many colors
01:34:08to blend into the crowd
01:34:10on other occasions.
01:34:12Shaving your hair
01:34:14doesn't make them thicker,
01:34:16doesn't change their color,
01:34:18and doesn't make them harder.
01:34:20They just look better
01:34:22because the new hairs
01:34:24start to grow back
01:34:26with fuzzy tips at the ends.
01:34:28The memories of red fish
01:34:30last much longer than three seconds.
01:34:32These creatures can remember things
01:34:34for up to three months.
01:34:36You can also teach your red fish
01:34:38to feed in the same place every day,
01:34:40while the green ones blend perfectly
01:34:42into their environment.
01:34:44These animals don't need
01:34:46their ability to change color
01:34:48to hide. They use their amazing
01:34:50ability to communicate
01:34:52and control temperature.
01:34:54During an earthquake,
01:34:56you should find a door
01:34:58because it's the safest place
01:35:00in a building.
01:35:02In fact, it's not safer
01:35:04than another part of your house.
01:35:06Try to hide under a table
01:35:08or under a chair.
01:35:10In many cartoons,
01:35:12we've seen opossums
01:35:14hanging upside down.
01:35:16Indeed, their tails are strong
01:35:18enough to allow them to hang
01:35:20like this for a short time.
01:35:22But their bodies are too big
01:35:24to hang on a branch
01:35:26longer than a short photo.
01:35:28We all know the saying
01:35:30that you can't teach
01:35:32an old dog new tricks.
01:35:34But if puppies learn more easily,
01:35:36they'll be able to
01:35:38teach you new tricks.
01:35:40Dogs' saliva has a slightly
01:35:42more alkaline pH,
01:35:44which can prevent bacteria
01:35:46from reproducing.
01:35:48But hundreds of bacteria
01:35:50can live in a dog's mouth,
01:35:52which can be harmful to your skin.
01:35:54No, my dog can kiss me
01:35:56as much as he wants.
01:35:58Napoleon was one of the greatest
01:36:00emperors in the history of mankind.
01:36:02But in modern times,
01:36:04he was taller than
01:36:06the average height of the time.
01:36:08Napoleon was even the leader
01:36:10of the French national basketball team.
01:36:12No, I just made it up.
01:36:14Do chameleons
01:36:16change color just to hide?
01:36:18No.
01:36:20They can actually change it
01:36:22to reflect their mood.
01:36:24Thus, the males take a bright color
01:36:26to show their dominance,
01:36:28and they become darker
01:36:30when they are aggressive.
01:36:32At a certain temperature,
01:36:34a cold chameleon becomes dark
01:36:36to absorb more heat,
01:36:38while a hot chameleon
01:36:40becomes pale to reflect the sun's rays.
01:36:42By the way,
01:36:44do comedians change color
01:36:46to hide?
01:36:48Only if their jokes are not funny.
01:36:50There is a myth
01:36:52that says that if you drop
01:36:54a piece of a skyscraper,
01:36:56it will destroy
01:36:58pretty much everything
01:37:00but it's not true.
01:37:02When you drop it,
01:37:04a piece can't pick up enough speed
01:37:06to cause significant damage
01:37:08to anything,
01:37:10especially because of the wind's resistance,
01:37:12the fact that the piece rotates on itself
01:37:14and other factors.
01:37:16In short, it's not a reason
01:37:18to throw your money out the window.
01:37:20Some people think that waterfowl
01:37:22rotate in the opposite direction
01:37:24in the southern hemisphere.
01:37:26Some things are affected
01:37:28but waterfowl
01:37:30are way too small.
01:37:32Waterfowl can actually rotate
01:37:34in both directions,
01:37:36in the northern or southern hemisphere.
01:37:38The factors that determine
01:37:40the most the direction of waterfowl
01:37:42are the design of the toilet bowl
01:37:44and the pressure of the water.
01:37:46There is a popular saying
01:37:48that says that lightning never strikes twice
01:37:50in the same place.
01:37:52It's false.
01:37:54Lightning strikes often in the same place
01:37:56which is generally the highest and
01:37:58the most pointed target.
01:38:00Researchers have discovered
01:38:02that the Empire State Building
01:38:04was struck by lightning
01:38:06nearly 100 times a year
01:38:08and a certain number of people
01:38:10have been struck more than once.
01:38:12So if you are tall and pointed,
01:38:14be careful in the event of a storm.
01:38:16We often believe that bats are blind,
01:38:18but they have a better vision
01:38:20than humans at night,
01:38:22although they can see more clearly
01:38:24Maybe this myth has appeared
01:38:26because bats rely a lot
01:38:28on their eyes to move
01:38:30or because they see the world
01:38:32in black and white.
01:38:34Do red fish really have
01:38:36a short memory?
01:38:38Most people think it is 7 seconds,
01:38:40but in reality,
01:38:42red fish can remember certain things
01:38:44for 7 months.
01:38:46Besides, without a good memory,
01:38:48red fish that live in nature
01:38:50would never find food.
01:38:52Is it possible that a mother bird
01:38:54will reject her offspring
01:38:56if she has been touched by a human?
01:38:58It would be strange,
01:39:00because most birds
01:39:02do not have a very developed sense of smell.
01:39:04They would never be able
01:39:06to identify the smell of a person.
01:39:08The vulture is an exception to this rule.
01:39:10It has an incredible nose.
01:39:12But who would want to touch a vulture,
01:39:14even small?
01:39:16Ostriches bury their heads
01:39:18in the sand when they are afraid,
01:39:20probably because the head
01:39:22of an ostrich is surprisingly small
01:39:24compared to its body.
01:39:26Thus, from a distance,
01:39:28we have the impression that the ostrich
01:39:30has its head buried in the sand.
01:39:32But if it really did that,
01:39:34it would faint by not being able to breathe.
01:39:36Another myth about animals
01:39:38is that opossums cling to branches
01:39:40with their tails.
01:39:42The opossum actually uses its tail
01:39:44to help it climb trees,
01:39:46but it cannot bear its weight.
01:39:48An opossum champion of calisthenics
01:39:50could only hang there for a few seconds.
01:39:54Legend has it that a penguin
01:39:56falls upside down when it looks at a plane.
01:39:58The cutest myth ever.
01:40:00Penguins can maintain their balance
01:40:02no matter what happens,
01:40:04even when looking at the sky.
01:40:06But low-altitude flying planes
01:40:08can push penguins to flee their nest in panic.
01:40:12Do dogs really sweat by salivating?
01:40:14No, they sweat
01:40:16through their plantar cushion.
01:40:18But salivating and salivating
01:40:20help them regulate their body temperature.
01:40:22Cat owners may think
01:40:24that a cat only purrs when it is happy.
01:40:26But cats also purr when they are hungry,
01:40:28are in distress,
01:40:30or are recovering from an injury.
01:40:32Researchers think that purring
01:40:34can be a self-healing technique.
01:40:36In a way, it helps their bones
01:40:38and muscles to function better.
01:40:40According to an urban legend,
01:40:42if you come across an opossum,
01:40:44you will stink for a while.
01:40:46But opossums prefer to flee
01:40:48rather than spray their magic juice
01:40:50all over the place.
01:40:52This smelly spray is their
01:40:54last line of defense.
01:40:56Before that, they usually tap
01:40:58their feet and tails to ward off any danger.
01:41:02Did you know that there was
01:41:04an alpha wolf in every pack?
01:41:06Well, no, that's still wrong.
01:41:08Unlike wild wolves living in captivity,
01:41:10wild wolves do not share this kind of social order.
01:41:12They live in family groups,
01:41:14like humans, where the parents are the bosses
01:41:16and the kids have to do what they are told.
01:41:20There is a myth that says
01:41:22that opossums can walk around with their heads.
01:41:24But that would cause them a lot of damage.
01:41:26However, they can turn their heads
01:41:28comfortably at nearly 270 degrees,
01:41:30thanks to the unique structure
01:41:32of their neck bones.
01:41:34If you have ever touched a turtle's shell,
01:41:36thinking that it would not hurt
01:41:38the creature inside, you are wrong.
01:41:40The shell of a turtle is a living
01:41:42and sensitive part of its body,
01:41:44with a complete network of nerves.
01:41:46If the shell is damaged,
01:41:48it can even put the life of the turtle at risk.
01:41:52There was a time when people thought
01:41:54that unwashed hair was the ideal habitat
01:41:56for opossums.
01:41:58But opossums do not discriminate.
01:42:00They can make a place
01:42:02in all types of hair.
01:42:04All they want is a very hot
01:42:06and curly scalp.
01:42:08Most people know the expression
01:42:10eating apples to stay healthy.
01:42:12Apples are good for your health.
01:42:14It is undeniable.
01:42:16They are full of nutrients,
01:42:18like fiber and vitamin C.
01:42:20But does anyone really think
01:42:22that it is enough?
01:42:24When it comes to food hygiene,
01:42:26the 5-second rule on Earth
01:42:28simply makes no sense.
01:42:30There should be a rule
01:42:32depending on where you dropped
01:42:34food to replace the 5-second rule.
01:42:36You will pick up less bacteria
01:42:38than if you drop it
01:42:40in a supermarket,
01:42:42assuming that your kitchen
01:42:44is clean, of course.
01:42:46Have you ever wondered
01:42:48if the 7-year-old opossum
01:42:50story was true?
01:42:52It is not the case.
01:42:54The opossum is not very different
01:42:56from other food.
01:42:58It takes about the same time
01:43:00to be digested,
01:43:02but it is not really rich in nutrients.
01:43:04Some studies have shown
01:43:06that time does not really
01:43:08play a role in the appearance
01:43:10of the opossum.
01:43:12It is a virus.
01:43:14People can feel the symptoms
01:43:16of the opossum more
01:43:18when the weather is cold,
01:43:20but the temperature
01:43:22has nothing to do
01:43:24with the healing time.
01:43:26Do people only use
01:43:2810% of their brain?
01:43:30For some people,
01:43:32scientists who have studied
01:43:34brain scanners say that
01:43:36they do not reveal large dormant areas.
01:43:38But this myth simply means
01:43:40that humans have a long way to go
01:43:42to reach their full potential.
01:43:44So yes, why not?
01:43:46One of the things not to do
01:43:48in life is to jump into the pool
01:43:50just after eating.
01:43:52But doing any sport
01:43:54just after a big meal
01:43:56can leave you feeling
01:43:58just as uncomfortable
01:44:00as jumping into the pool.
01:44:02Shaved hair grows blacker
01:44:04and thicker.
01:44:06Researchers say that this is not the case.
01:44:08But shaving gives your hair
01:44:10a foamy tip
01:44:12that can make it look thicker.
01:44:14As for the color,
01:44:16this new darker beard
01:44:18is just an illusion.
01:44:20Some people are convinced
01:44:22that eating opossum
01:44:24gives them a feeling of drowsiness.
01:44:26It is true that opossum contains
01:44:28not only opossum,
01:44:30but also chicken and beef.
01:44:32Opossum is one of the favorite
01:44:34foods for big family parties.
01:44:36So this drowsiness is probably
01:44:38due to the huge amount
01:44:40of food ingested.
01:44:42The myth that people
01:44:44lose most of their body heat
01:44:46by their heads
01:44:48was probably invented
01:44:50by a hat seller.
01:44:52But scientists say
01:44:54that we only lose
01:44:57Have you ever heard that
01:44:59the full moon can affect
01:45:01your mood in one way or another?
01:45:03Well, no.
01:45:05But researchers think that
01:45:07the light of a full moon
01:45:09can affect your sleep,
01:45:11which can affect your mood.
01:45:13Did the ancient Vikings
01:45:15really wear these beautiful
01:45:17horn hats?
01:45:19There is no real proof
01:45:21to support this claim.
01:45:23This myth probably comes
01:45:25from a football match
01:45:27of the Minnesota Vikings.
01:45:29Some people think
01:45:31that Einstein was bad at math
01:45:33at school.
01:45:35Einstein himself
01:45:37said that he was
01:45:39good at math at the age of 15.
01:45:41But Einstein didn't
01:45:43enter the school of his choice
01:45:45because he failed
01:45:47in language at his first attempt.
01:45:49As for the math test,
01:45:51he did it by hand.
01:45:53This myth came about
01:45:55in the Middle Ages.
01:45:57At that time,
01:45:59the food that mice and rats
01:46:01enjoyed much more
01:46:03than cheese was out of reach.
01:46:05For example, people stored
01:46:07cereals in jars and kept
01:46:09meat suspended on the walls
01:46:11and ceilings.
01:46:13But cheeses usually
01:46:15grew old hidden in
01:46:17cupboards or shelves.
01:46:19Rats and mice could easily
01:46:21hide in cupboards.
01:46:23Dogs don't see the world
01:46:25in black and white.
01:46:27They distinguish colors,
01:46:29but not as well as us.
01:46:31We have three types of cones
01:46:33in our eyes,
01:46:35while dogs only have two.
01:46:37Cones are special photoreceptors
01:46:39that allow us to perceive
01:46:41colors.
01:46:43Dogs see certain colors
01:46:45like blue and yellow
01:46:47better than others.
01:46:49Dogs' saliva
01:46:51has no healing properties.
01:46:53They don't sweat through their tongues.
01:46:55When dogs breath,
01:46:57their tongues sweat.
01:46:59But most of their
01:47:01oesophageal glands
01:47:03are on their legs
01:47:05and the rest of their body.
01:47:07If they breathe,
01:47:09it's to remove the excess moisture
01:47:11in their nasal cavity,
01:47:13on their tongues
01:47:15and on the walls of their lungs.
01:47:17They have a good memory
01:47:19and are immune to most snakes' venom.
01:47:21They are also very sociable.
01:47:23But contrary to popular belief,
01:47:25they don't sleep by the tail.
01:47:27These animals have strong tails,
01:47:29and that makes them excellent climbers.
01:47:31But they don't have the necessary
01:47:33muscle structure to keep
01:47:35such a position for a long time.
01:47:37Bats are not blind.
01:47:39They are nocturnal animals
01:47:41and they don't see very well during the day,
01:47:43but their vision is three times better
01:47:45during the night.
01:47:47They don't have color receptors,
01:47:49but humans are no longer able
01:47:51to perceive colors when there is little light.
01:47:53Bats also use echolocation,
01:47:55which consists of locating objects
01:47:57by the sound waves they reflect
01:47:59to detect small insects in the air.
01:48:01Chameleons have the ability
01:48:03to change the color of their body,
01:48:05but they don't necessarily do it
01:48:07to melt in their environment.
01:48:09They do it mainly to communicate
01:48:11with other animals of their species
01:48:13In their natural state,
01:48:15these animals have the color
01:48:17of branches and leaves.
01:48:19We often believe it,
01:48:21but rhino horns are not made of bone.
01:48:23They are made of keratin,
01:48:25the same material you can find
01:48:27in your nails and hair.
01:48:29Horns don't grow directly
01:48:31from the rhino's skull.
01:48:33They are rather comparable
01:48:35to a mass of very, very compact hair.
01:48:37They grow throughout their life,
01:48:39just like our nails and hair.
01:48:41But rhinos don't use them
01:48:43all the time.
01:48:45Some animals use their teeth
01:48:47to protect themselves from their enemies.
01:48:49No wonder, knowing that the one
01:48:51on their lower jaw is so sharp.
01:48:53If you press the alarm button
01:48:55in the morning,
01:48:57you don't really enjoy
01:48:59those 10 more minutes of sleep.
01:49:01Of course, it feels good
01:49:03to push back the time to get up
01:49:05and stay warm in your bed.
01:49:07But the alarm button
01:49:09makes your brain think
01:49:11it's going to fall asleep
01:49:13and you'll have even more trouble
01:49:15waking up when your alarm
01:49:17goes off for the second
01:49:19or fifth time.
01:49:21In the long run,
01:49:23the alarm button
01:49:25can affect the quality
01:49:27of your sleep.
01:49:29When we talk about dessert,
01:49:31I always think of chocolate.
01:49:33Oh, no, wait,
01:49:35I made a mistake.
01:49:37Desserts are defined
01:49:39not by their temperature,
01:49:41but by the lack of precipitation.
01:49:43Most of the world's known
01:49:45deserts are hot,
01:49:47but some are extremely cold.
01:49:49For example, there are polar
01:49:51deserts in the north of Greenland.
01:49:53Can we talk about chocolate now?
01:49:55No?
01:49:57Here's another myth.
01:49:59The lightning never strikes twice
01:50:01in the same place.
01:50:03That's not entirely true.
01:50:05Lightning never strikes twice,
01:50:07and that's often the case.
01:50:09So if you're surprised by a storm,
01:50:11it's best to look around you.
01:50:13Instead of taking refuge
01:50:15where lightning has already struck,
01:50:17try to shelter yourself
01:50:19and avoid touching metal objects.
01:50:21You'll never see a owl
01:50:23turn its head 360 degrees,
01:50:25even if you can get the impression
01:50:27sometimes.
01:50:29Instead of eyeglasses,
01:50:31owls have eye tubes.
01:50:33They can't move their eyes.
01:50:35That's why they have to turn their heads
01:50:37when they want to see what's around them.
01:50:39They can't take a full turn,
01:50:41but they get very close.
01:50:43270 degrees,
01:50:45which is 3 quarters of a full rotation.
01:50:47Not bad.
01:50:49Cats don't purr only
01:50:51when they're happy.
01:50:53They also purr when they're sick,
01:50:55scared, or even angry.
01:50:57Despite a widespread belief,
01:50:59felines don't gracefully fall
01:51:01on their paws every time they fall.
01:51:03It's true that they have
01:51:05the famous reflex to straighten up.
01:51:07A cat has a vestibular device
01:51:09in its inner ear,
01:51:11a system that helps balance
01:51:13and that the animal uses to orient itself.
01:51:15Thanks to this system,
01:51:17a cat can quickly understand
01:51:19how to rotate its head
01:51:21so that its body follows.
01:51:23In the end, the animal lands on its paws,
01:51:25but this reflex doesn't work every time.
01:51:27Elephants don't use their trunk
01:51:29as a straw to drink.
01:51:31When an elephant is thirsty,
01:51:33it pours a little water into its trunk,
01:51:35then brings it to its mouth
01:51:37and lets the water go inside.
01:51:39In other words, when these animals drink water,
01:51:41it doesn't go through their trunk,
01:51:43just like people don't drink
01:51:45through their noses.
01:51:47Elephants have huge ears,
01:51:49but they can also listen
01:51:51with their feet.
01:51:53When they want to analyze a distant noise,
01:51:55elephants freeze and lean forward
01:51:57so that most of their weight
01:51:59rests on their front paws.
01:52:01Sometimes they even lift one of their front paws.
01:52:03They use seismic vibrations,
01:52:05that is, they detect
01:52:07the sound waves that move
01:52:09not in the air, but in the ground.
01:52:11There are many myths about your brain.
01:52:13For example,
01:52:15its right part would be creative
01:52:17and the left logical,
01:52:19but your brain doesn't work like that.
01:52:21It is not strictly divided into parts
01:52:23covering a single domain,
01:52:25like creativity or something else.
01:52:27The actions you take
01:52:29and the things you experience
01:52:31are the result of the activity
01:52:33of the whole of your brain.
01:52:35The cerebral cortex is the part of your brain
01:52:37that is made up of two halves.
01:52:39But these two halves are connected
01:52:41to many other areas
01:52:43that make up the rest of the brain.
01:52:45Thus, the neurons of the left part of your brain
01:52:47will not become the computer genius
01:52:49and those of the right half
01:52:51will not become poets.
01:52:53Your brain turns off when you sleep.
01:52:55But this is not the case.
01:52:57Its activity slows down when you sleep deeply
01:52:59and becomes more active when you dream.
01:53:01During this phase,
01:53:03the activity of your brain is almost as intense
01:53:05as when you are completely awake.
01:53:07Without trying to scare you,
01:53:09you do not see with your eyes,
01:53:11do not hear with your ears
01:53:13and do not feel with your skin.
01:53:15For example, you are washing your face.
01:53:17Your skin does not have a special sensor
01:53:19to detect humidity.
01:53:21It detects different sources of information,
01:53:23including temperature,
01:53:25touch or your previous experience.
01:53:27This is how you feel
01:53:29that your face is wet.
01:53:31Your brain creates this sensation
01:53:33after having analyzed all kinds of information.
01:53:35It does not really react
01:53:37to what is happening around you.
01:53:39It may seem to work like this.
01:53:41You see a cute little puppy
01:53:43and it makes you smile.
01:53:45Your friend makes a stupid joke
01:53:47and you blush.
01:53:49Your brain does not wait for something to happen
01:53:51to react to it.
01:53:53Instead, it constantly tries to guess
01:53:55what is going to happen.
01:53:57Your brain begins to analyze your actions
01:53:59and the experiences you have lived
01:54:01before even receiving data from your ears,
01:54:03your nose, your eyes and other organs.
01:54:05Your brain constantly works
01:54:07to predict what the world will be
01:54:09the next moment and what you will do in this world.
01:54:11So, even if you do not really react
01:54:13directly to the world,
01:54:15this prediction process takes place
01:54:17so slowly and so quickly
01:54:19that you feel the opposite.
01:54:21Let's continue.
01:54:23Technically, Jupiter is not in orbit
01:54:25around the Sun.
01:54:27When a smaller and less massive object
01:54:29rotates around a larger one,
01:54:31its trajectory does not describe a perfect circle.
01:54:33Instead, these two objects
01:54:35follow their respective elliptical orbits
01:54:37around a barycenter,
01:54:39which is their common center of gravity.
01:54:41The Earth is much smaller than the Sun.
01:54:43This is why the barycenter
01:54:45is closer to the center of the Sun.
01:54:47And this is why we do not see
01:54:49that the orbit of our planet is a little offset.
01:54:51But Jupiter is the largest planet
01:54:53in our solar system.
01:54:55It is more than twice as massive
01:54:57as all the other planets, asteroids,
01:54:59moons and comets combined.
01:55:01Thus, the barycenter of Jupiter and the Sun
01:55:03is a little far from the center of the star,
01:55:05at about 48,300 km
01:55:07above its surface.
01:55:09That's it, we can talk about chocolate now.
01:55:11Well, maybe next time.