37 Bars, 50 Tons of Ice: Incredible Facts about the Leviathan of Luxury; TALLER Than Nelson's Column, Longer Than Four Football Pitches --the Oasis of the Seas (above), Now Preparing for Her Maiden Voyage, Is the World's Largest Cruise Ship. It Has Every Imaginable Facility, from ...
St Patrick’s Day is here, and it is celebrated in all corners of the world, by people of many different nationalities. While many people mainly use the day as an excuse to drink an untold amount of booze, it is still—first and foremost—a day to celebrate Irish heritage and culture....
Very little is known about the mating rituals of these animals. They do appear to have a courtship of some sort where the male approaches the female when it is time to breed. It is unknown just what triggers mating behavior in them though. However, it is believed males may fight other ...
Megalodon didn't earn its name "giant tooth" for nothing. The teeth of this prehistoric shark were serrated, heart-shaped, and over half a foot long; by comparison, the largest teeth of a Great White Shark only measure about three inches long. You have to go back 65 million years--to ...
Where is the children in this case? Lets see. Pauline Rogers Her testimony on the Montel Williams show shows that she is (Disgruntle) wrote letters according to Sheriff Sills about children being molested but, according to Pauline on the Montel Williams show she did not see no one being mo...
whereas a modern Great White Shark clamps its jaws shut with about 1.8 tons of force per square inch, Megalodon chomped down on its prey with a force of between 10.8 and 18.2 tons—enough to crush the skull of a prehistoric whale as easily as a grape, and far outclassing the bite forc...
In 1845, William Parsons (1800-1867), 3rd Earl of Rosse, built the Leviathan of Parsonstown, a reflecting telescope of 72 in (1.8 m) aperture. It was the largest telescope in the world until 1917. His youngest son, Sir Charles Algernon Parsons (1854-1931) invented the steam turbine and...
brand of fact that have come to be known as "legislative facts." (56) A legislative fact, as I have defined elsewhere and as others have discussed at length, is a generalized fact about the world, as opposed to a "whodunit" fact relating to the parties before a court in any one ...
In the Middle Ages, most people believed that all dragons were evil, deadly and an omen of terrible things to come. To Christians, they were a symbol of sin or Satan. These beliefs likely came from the Bible's book of Job, which describes a terrifying beast called the Leviathan. Accordin...
The most famous monsters in modern fiction include mummies, zombies, werewolves, vampires, and Frankenstein. Argus was an Ancient Greek monster with about one hundred eyes located all over his body. Other popular Ancient Greek monsters include Cerberus (three-headed dog), Cyclops (one-eyed giant)...