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100 Amazing Earth Facts |
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61. Which
planet has more
moons, Earth or
Mars? |
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Mars has two satellites,
Phobos and Deimos.
The Earth has only one
natural satellite, but it's the
Moon.
The outer planets have lots
of Moon, most of them found
fairly recently and leading
to the possibility that
scientists might one day
need to
redefine what it means to be a moon. |
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62. What is
the world's
deepest lake? |
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Lake Baikal in the south
central part of Siberia is
5,712 feet (1.7 kilometers)
deep. It's about 20 million
years old and contains 20
percent of Earth's fresh
liquid water. |
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63. What is
the origin of
the word
"volcano"? |
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It derives from Vulcan, the
Roman god of fire. |
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64. How many
minerals are
known to exist? |
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There are roughly 4,000
known minerals, although
only about 200 are of major
importance. Approximately
50-100 new minerals are
described each year. |
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65. What is
the total water
supply of the
world? |
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The total water supply of
the world is 326 million
cubic miles (1 cubic mile of
water equals more than 1
trillion gallons). |
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66. What is
the world's
largest island? |
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Greenland covers 840,000
square miles (2,176,000
square kilometers).
Continents are typically
defined as landmasses made
of low-density rock that
essentially floats on the
molten material below.
Greenland fits this
description, but it's only
about one-third the size of
Australia. Some scientists
call Greenland an island,
others say it's a continent. |
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67. Where are
most of Earth's
volcanoes? |
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The most prominent
topographic feature on Earth
is the immense volcanic
mountain chain that
encircles the planet beneath
the sea -- the chain is more
than 30,000 miles (48,000
kilometers) long and rises
an average of 18,000 feet
(5.5 kilometers) above the
seafloor. It is called the
mid-ocean ridge and is where
Earth's plates spread apart
as new crust bubbles up --
volcanic activity. There are
more volcanoes here than on
land. The spreading,
however, leads to scrunching
when these plates slam into
the continents. The result:
More volcanoes and
earthquakes in places like
California and Japan. |
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68. What
volcano killed
the most people? |
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The eruption of Tambora
volcano in Indonesia in 1815
is estimated to have killed
90,000 people. Most died
from starvation after the
eruption, though, because of
widespread crop destruction,
and from water contamination
and disease. |
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69.
Were Earth and
the Moon
separated at
birth? |
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Not quite. But leading
theory holds that our
favorite satellite was
carved partly from Earth
shortly after the Earth
formed. A Mars-sized object
slammed into our fledgling
planet.
The impactor was destroyed.
Stuff flew everywhere and a
lot of it went into orbit
around Earth. The Moon
gathered itself together out
of the largely vaporized
remains of the collision,
while Earth hung in there
pretty much intact. |
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70.
How many
lightning
strikes occur
worldwide every
second? |
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On average, about 100. Those
are just the ones that hit
the ground, though. During
any given minute, there are
more than a thousand
thunderstorms around the
Earth causing some 6,000
flashes of
lightning. A lot of it
goes from cloud-to-cloud. |
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71.
Are rivers
alive? |
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Not in the traditional
sense, of course. But like
all living creatures, rivers
have a life span. They are
born, grow in size, and they
age. They can even die
during the span of
geological time. |
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72.
Can asteroids
create islands? |
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Speculation has existed for
decades that ancient
asteroid impacts might
create hot spots of volcanic
activity, which could give
rise to mountains that poke
up through seas that didn't
used to be there. There's no
firm answer to this
question, but a recent
computer model suggested
Hawaii might have been
formed in this manner. |
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73.
Is the state of
Louisiana
growing or
shrinking? |
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Louisiana loses about 30
square miles (78 square
kilometers) of land each
year to coastal erosion,
hurricanes, other natural
and human causes and a thing
called subsidence, which
means sinking. Much of New
Orleans actually sits 11
feet (3.4 meters) below sea
level. Parts of the French
quarter have sunk 2 feet in
the past six decades. The
city is protected by dikes,
but all experts agree that
storm tides from a direct
hit by a major hurricane
would breach the system and
swamp much of the city. In
2000, the director of the
U.S. Geological Survey, Chip
Groat, said: "With the
projected rate of
subsidence, wetland loss and
sea-level rise, New Orleans
will likely be on the verge
of extinction by this time
next century." |
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74.
How much would
seas rise if the
Antarctic Ice
Sheet melted? |
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The Antarctic Ice Sheet
holds nearly 90 percent of
the world's ice and 70
percent of its fresh water.
If the entire ice sheet were
to melt, sea level would
rise by nearly 220 feet, or
the height of a 20-story
building. Scientists know
there's a melting trend
underway. The United Nations
has said that in a
worst-case scenario - depending on how much
global air temperatures
increase - seas could jump
3 feet (1 meter) by 2100. |
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75.
Is ice a
mineral? |
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Yes, ice is a mineral and is
formally described as such
in Dana's System of
Mineralogy. |
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76.
What is the
softest of all
minerals? |
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Talc is the softest of
minerals. It is commonly
used to make talcum powder. |
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77. What is
the hardest of
all minerals? |
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The one that becomes
emotionally useless after a
divorce but still retains
monetary value. |
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78.
How are colors
produced in
fireworks? |
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Mineral elements taken from
Earth provide the colors.
Strontium yields deep reds,
copper produces blue, sodium
yields yellow, and iron
filings and charcoal pieces
produce gold sparks. Bright
flashes and loud bangs come
from aluminum powder. |
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79.
Does Earth have
the worst
weather in the
solar system? |
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Right now, it's the worst
that most humans I know ever
experience. But there's lots
of
wilder weather elsewhere.
Mars can whip up
hurricane-like storms four
times bigger than Texas.
Dust storms on the red
planet can
obscure the entire globe!
Jupiter has a
hurricane twice the size our entire
planet, and it's lasted for
at least three centuries (another
storm
on Jupiter is even bigger).
Venus is a living hell, and
Pluto is routinely more
frigid than the coldest
place on Earth (though may
change one day, and Pluto
may in fact become
the last oasis for life). |
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80.
Where are the
highest tides? |
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In Burntcoat Head, Minas
Basin, part of the Bay of
Fundy in Nova Scotia, tides
can range 38.4 feet (11.7
meters). The bay is funnel
shaped -- its bottom slopes
upward continuously from the
ocean inlet. The result is
an extreme "tidal bore," a
wave-like phenomenon at the
leading edge of the changing
tide. Bores in Fundy can
travel up feeder rivers at 8
mph (13 kph) and be more
than 3 feet (1 meter) tall. |
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