Wikipedia:Did you know/Statistics/Monthly DYK pageview leaders/2011
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This DYK STATS/Archive 2011 page is an archive of the monthly DYKSTATS leaders for each month in 2011, recognizing the DYK entries that have received the most page views while being featured on DYK.
On an important note: Please do not see this list as a competition, but rather a celebration of some of the most effective DYK hooks.
- 2011 DYK page view leaders by month (over 5,000 views)
January 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Brittany CoxXx | 26,064 | ... that Borat Sagdiyev's son, who appeared in photos in the movie Borat, was actually trans woman and porn star Brittany CoxXx (pictured)? | |
Bloody Saturday (photograph) | 24,400 | ... that Life magazine estimated 136 million people saw the photograph "Bloody Saturday" (detail pictured) after the August 1937 bombing of Shanghai? | |
Stargazy pie | 23,300 | ... that the Cornish delicacy Stargazy pie (pictured), which includes pilchards protruding through the crust, was designed to be fun and amusing to children? | |
Bacon ice cream | 21,200 | ... that bacon ice cream (pictured) was originally created for April Fools' Day but went on to be one of Heston Blumenthal's signature dishes? | |
Chengdu J-20 | 19,325 | ... that the development of the Chengdu J-20 fighter aircraft may have been assisted by cyberespionage? | |
ZX81 | 18,900 | ... that users of the Sinclair ZX81 (pictured), a British home computer of the early 1980s, balanced cartons of cold milk on top of the case to stop it from overheating? | |
General Dynamics F-111C | 14,900 | ... that a General Dynamics F-111C bomber (RF-111C pictured) of the Royal Australian Air Force sank the North Korean freighter Pong Su in 2006? | |
BOAR (rocket) | 14,500 | ... that the Bombardment Aircraft Rocket carried a 20 kiloton nuclear warhead, was unguided, and was launched using an "idiot loop" manoeuvre (pictured)? | |
AQM-127 SLAT MA-31 |
8,200 + 6,000 = 14,200 | ... that the U.S. Navy purchased a Russian missile for use as a target drone after the AQM-127 SLAT failed seven of eight test firings? | |
iPad 2 | 14,000 | ... that the iPad 2 is thinner than an iPhone 4 and comes in black and white? | |
Circumcision of Jesus | 13,600 | ... that the Gospel of Luke states that the Circumcision of Jesus (pictured) took place eight days after his birth? | |
Zouaves of Death | 13,015 | ... that the Zouaves of Death (pictured), a Polish military unit of the January Uprising, drew their traditions from the French Zouaves of the Crimean War? | |
Allied naval bombardments of Japan during World War II | 12,900 | ... that United States Navy, British Royal Navy and Royal New Zealand Navy warships bombarded several Japanese cities (bombardment of Kamaishi pictured) during the last weeks of World War II? | |
Roger Locher | 12,800 | ... that USAF General Vogt "shut down the war" and sent 119 aircraft to recover Major Roger Locher (pictured) only 60 miles (97 km) from Hanoi—the deepest rescue inside North Vietnam during the Vietnam War? | |
Edward Proger | 12,500 | ... that nonagenarian Edward Proger (pictured) died of cutting teeth? | |
Have Dash | 12,400 | ... that the Have Dash II (artist's concept pictured) missile was an attempt to develop a stealthy air-to-air missile? | |
Peter Turnbull (RAAF officer) | 12,400 | ... that RAAF flying ace Peter Turnbull (pictured) was fired on by his own anti-aircraft gunners as he brought his Kittyhawk fighters in to land at Port Moresby, New Guinea, in March 1942? | |
Operation Tarnegol | 12,100 | ... that Operation Tarnegol, in which an Israeli Meteor NF.13 (pictured) shot down an Egyptian Ilyushin Il-14 transport, was only made public 32 years after the event? | |
Mitsubishi 1MF9 | 12,100 | ... that the Mitsubishi 1MF9 was the first Japanese-designed fighter intended for use from aircraft carriers? | |
A Star Is Born (2012 film) | 10,900 | ... that the 2012 version of A Star Is Born, due to star Beyoncé Knowles (pictured), would be the fourth remake of the film? | |
Cornfield Bomber | 10,600 | ... that after the Cornfield Bomber landed in a field, one of the members of the 71st Fighter-Interceptor Squadron received a call from a sheriff who got excited when the plane started moving? | |
Auriscalpium vulgare | 10,000 | ... that the mushroom Auriscalpium vulgare (pictured) is named for an instrument used for personal hygiene? | |
Murder of Joanna Yeates | 9,900 | ... that the inquiry into the murder of Joanna Yeates, dubbed "Operation Braid", has become one of the largest police investigations in Bristol, England? | |
Japanese air attacks on the Mariana Islands | 9,800 | ... that the Japanese air attacks on the Mariana Islands between November 1944 and January 1945 sought to disrupt the bombing of Japan by United States Army Air Forces aircraft based on the islands? | |
Vein matching | 9,700 | ... that the FBI and CIA used vein matching as evidence that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed of al-Qaeda had killed journalist Daniel Pearl? | |
GTR-18 Smokey Sam | 9,400 | ... that the GTR-18 rocket (launch pictured), used extensively by the U.S. military, is made using phenolic paper and styrofoam? | |
I.S.T. XL-14 Maya | 9,000 | ... that the I.S.T. XL-14 Maya, a light aircraft, was constructed primarily from woven bamboo? | |
Douglas XCG-17 | 8,500 | ... that the Douglas XCG-17 glider (pictured) was converted from a C-47 transport that had originally flown for Northwest Airlines? | |
Jared Lee Loughner | 8,200 | ... that Jared Lee Loughner was detained at the Federal Correctional Institution at Phoenix after the 2011 Tucson shooting? | |
Thomas-Morse MB-4 | 7,000 + 1,100 = 8,100 | ... that Thomas-Morse's general plant superintendent called the company's MB-4 mail plane "the worst thing on wings"? | |
Peter Jeffrey (RAAF officer) | 7,900 | ... that in 1941, RAAF Squadron Leader Peter Jeffrey (pictured) introduced the radical concept of commissioned and non-commissioned pilots sharing a common mess while on combat duty? | |
Hudson Valley Rail Trail | 7,800 | ... that the Hudson Valley Rail Trail (pictured), once owned by a felonious charlatan, is patrolled by a police officer riding a Segway? | |
Pilophorus acicularis | 7,800 | ... that the devil's matchstick (pictured) supplies fixed nitrogen to the environment? | |
Coffin birth | 7,800 | ... that, in 1551, hours after a pregnant woman was hanged during the Spanish Inquisition, two dead infants were seen to fall free of the body in an unusual case of coffin birth?" | |
EADS CASA HC-144 Ocean Sentry | 7,389 | ... that the U.S. Coast Guard's HC-144 Ocean Sentry aircraft have been used for search and rescue, oil spill monitoring, and sea-turtle transport? | |
Alpha Draco WS-199 |
5,000 + 2,300 = 7,300 | ... that the Alpha Draco rocket (pictured), developed as part of Weapons System 199, evaluated the lifting body principle for reentry vehicles? | |
Marburg's Bloody Sunday | 7,000 | ... that during Marburg's Bloody Sunday massacre, military units commanded by Rudolf Maister killed between 11 and 13 German civilian protesters in a central Maribor square? | |
Long Tail Point Light | 7,000 | ... that the Long Tail Point Light survived attempts to demolish it in 1870, and has outlasted both its successors? | |
Helixanthera schizocalyx | 6,900 | ... that the hairless half-meter parasite Helixanthera schizocalyx was discovered by lepidopterist Colin Congdon on the lookout for loranths near the summit of Mozambique's Mount Mabu? | |
Nuri Demirağ Nu D.38 | 6,875 | ... that although the Nuri Demirağ Nu D.38 transport aircraft was completed in 1941, it was not flown until 1944? | |
Hopi (missile) | 6,800 | ... that the Hopi missile could carry a nuclear warhead of up to 400 kilotons yield? | |
Hughes Airwest Flight 706 | 6,800 | ... that, following the collision of Hughes Airwest Flight 706 with a Marine Corps F-4B Phantom II, the US Armed Forces required military aircraft to obey civilian air traffic controllers? | |
Vought XSO2U | 6,700 | ... that although the Vought XSO2U (pictured) was judged superior to the Curtiss XSO3C by the U.S. Navy in a competition for a new scout aircraft for operation from cruisers, the Curtiss aircraft won the contract? | |
Jackie (dog) | 6,600 | ... ... that a Nazi saluting dog nearly brought the wrath of the Third Reich upon a Finnish pharmaceutical company? | |
MQR-16 Gunrunner | 6,600 | ... that the stabilizing fins of the MQR-16 Gunrunner rocket were made from plywood? | |
Irish honours system | 6,600 | ... that the Republic of Ireland has no honours system, though the issue has been considered by successive governments since 1930? | |
Penshurst Airfield and October 1926 Air Union Blériot 155 crash |
1,700 + 4,800= 6,500 | ... that the October 1926 crash of a Blériot 155 (pictured) at Leigh, Kent, whilst trying to reach Penshurst Airfield was the result of the first mid-air fire on a civil airliner? | |
The Double Sunrise | 6,500 | ... that The Double Sunrise was a non-stop, approximately 30-hour airline flight, crossing over 3,500 nautical miles (6,500 km; 4,000 mi) above the Indian Ocean during World War II? | |
Pratt & Whitney J48 | 6,500 | ... that the Pratt & Whitney J48 turbojet engine (pictured) was originally designed by Rolls-Royce, who abandoned it in favor of a different project? | |
Maud Crawford | 6,473 | ...that the March 2, 1957, disappearance of attorney Maud Crawford from her Camden, Arkansas, home (pictured) remains officially unsolved? | |
B&F Fk9 | 6,400 | ... that the B&F Fk9 lightplane can be equipped with either a tricycle or conventional undercarriage? | |
Squab pie | 6,300 | ... that squab pies, which Charles Dickens said inspired "hatred of the whole human race", are not actually made with squabs? | |
Tropolis | 6,300 | ... that Tropolis has been called an attempt to "snackify" beverages? | |
St John's Church, High Legh | 6,200 | ... that the apparent timber framing of St John's Church, High Legh, Cheshire (pictured) is "a sham"? | |
Peucedanum galbanum | 6,200 | ... that the surface of the South African plant Peucedanum galbanum (pictured) is covered with blister-causing toxins, and that exposure to sunlight could make the blisters worse? | |
Diamondback (missile) | 6,100 | ... that the Diamondback air-to-air missile was originally known as the "Super Sidewinder"? | |
Fishery Protection Squadron | 6,100 | ... that two destroyers of the Royal Navy's Fishery Protection Squadron, commanded by a commodore aboard a fishing trawler (pictured), once thwarted an Icelandic boarding attempt? | |
Johngarthia lagostoma | 6,000 | ... that the largest native land animal on Ascension Island is a crab, Johngarthia lagostoma (pictured)? | |
Aleksandra Samusenko | 5,900 | ... that Soviet tank commander Aleksandra Samusenko was buried near the monument to German Emperor William I in Łobez? | |
Vought XSB3U | 5,900 | ... that the Vought XSB3U was designed as a result of the U.S. Navy's reluctance to embrace the monoplane for carrier operations? | |
Jamaican Flightless Ibis | 5,700 | ... that the extinct Jamaican Flightless Ibis developed unique club-like wings that could be used as a flail? | |
Decatur County Courthouse (Indiana) | 5,700 | ... that the Decatur County Courthouse (pictured) in Greensburg, Indiana, has a tree growing on it? | |
Grumman XSBF | 5,500 | ... that the Grumman XSBF was designed to the same specification that produced the SBD Dauntless of World War II fame? | |
Gulfstream X-54 | 5,200 | ... that despite being designated as an X-plane by NASA, the Gulfstream X-54 project does not otherwise involve the space agency? | |
Sky Scorcher | 5,100 | ... that the Sky Scorcher air-to-air missile would have carried a two-megaton nuclear warhead? | |
Murder of Anni Dewani | 5,100 | ... that Anni Dewani was a Swedish woman who was kidnapped and murdered during her honeymoon in Cape Town, South Africa? | |
Saguaro boot | 5,100 | ... that Saguaro boots are the co-creation of a bird and a cactus? | |
SNCASE SE-400 | 5,000 | ... that the SNCASE SE-400 was cancelled before the second prototype of the French floatplane could be completed? |
February 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Faces of Meth | 15,505 | ... that the Faces of Meth project shows before-and-after images documenting physical deterioration caused by meth use? | |
Piper LBP Taylorcraft LBT |
9,300 + 4,600 = 13,900 | ... that the Piper LBP (pictured) and Taylorcraft LBT were both developed during World War Two in response to a U.S. Navy requirement for a "Glomb", an unmanned glider bomb? | |
BLT (sandwich) | 13,600 | ... that high autumn pork prices are blamed on Americans eating so many BLTs (pictured) during the summer? | |
ASM-N-5 Gorgon V | 13,100 | ... that during the 1950s, the United States Navy intended to use Gorgons to deliver chemical weapons? | |
U Dhammaloka | 13,000 | ... that U Dhammaloka (pictured) was an Irish hobo who became one of the first known western Buddhist monks and was twice tried for sedition? | |
Maersk Triple E class | 12,400 | ... that Maersk Line's Triple E Class are expected to be the largest ships in the world when they enter service? | |
I Want to Break Free | 12,100 | ... that in 1984, while Queen's song "I Want to Break Free" charted within the Top 10 in Europe and South America, its video was banned in the US? | |
JB-4 | 12,100 | ... that the JB-4 missile (pictured) was guided via television? | |
George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont | 11,800 | ... that the 3rd Earl of Egremont (bust pictured) simultaneously maintained around 15 mistresses with more than 40 children at Petworth House? | |
Consolidated XB2Y | 11,500 | ... that the center section of the Consolidated XB2Y dive bomber was cut from a solid steel block? | |
John Hines (Australian soldier) | 11,300 | ... that a photograph of Private John Hines with the German money and equipment he had looted during the Battle of Polygon Wood in 1917 (pictured) is one of the best known Australian images of World War I? | |
Hubble Bubble (astronomy) | 11,100 | ... that the Hubble Bubble was a mysterious Local Void sphere, centered on Earth, predicted from redshift velocities of Type Ia Supernovae (pictured at lower left of NGC 4526)? | |
Death and funeral of Leonid Brezhnev | 10,600 | ... that because Leonid Brezhnev (pictured) had more than 200 decorations, it was decided to break the Soviet custom of featuring only one decoration on cushions during his funeral? | |
Rosendale Village, New York | 10,600 | ... that the 1977 dissolution of Rosendale Village (pictured) in Upstate New York was viewed by its mayor as a work of conceptual art? | |
3.5-Inch Forward Firing Aircraft Rocket | 10,500 | ... that the 3.5-Inch FFAR, developed by the U.S. Navy as an anti-submarine weapon, lacked an explosive warhead? | |
Spherical tokamak | 10,100 | ... that the spherical tokamak fusion power concept (typical plasma pictured) was initially tested in the START reactor on a shoestring budget using bits of older experiments? | |
Cornelius XBG-3 | 10,100 | ... that the Cornelius XBG-3 "bomb glider", an early guided missile designed in 1942, would have used a forward-swept wing? | |
Buridan's bridge | 9,900 | ... that a humorous solution for the Buridan's bridge sophism is that Plato should let Socrates cross the bridge and then throw him into the river on the other side? | |
Tara (Ramayana) | 9,700 | ... that the monkey-queen Tara (pictured with her first husband) is described in the Hindu epic Ramayana to have set a habit to visit her second husband Sugriva drunk before indulging in sex? | |
Belemnotheutis | 9,700 | ... that the 150-million-year-old ink of the extinct, squid-like Belemnotheutis (artist's rendition pictured) was used to draw a picture that paleontologists called "the ultimate self portrait"? | |
Capel Lligwy | 9,200 | ... that after a fox took shelter in the ruins of Capel Lligwy (pictured), in Anglesey, north Wales, a vault was discovered containing "a large mass of human bones, several feet in depth"? | |
ASM-A-1 Tarzon | 8,800 | ... that the United States Air Force enlisted Tarzon to destroy North Korean bridges? | |
Kamo (Bolshevik) | 8,600 | ... that Kamo (pictured) stole 341,000 rubles, was caught, feigned insanity for over three years, partly by eating his own excrement, escaped, was recaptured and sentenced to death, but was freed after a revolution? | |
Quicksilver GT500 | 8,300 | ... that the Quicksilver GT500 is the first aircraft certified under Part 21.24 of the Federal Aviation Regulations? | |
Never Miss a Super Bowl Club | 8,180 | ... that the Never Miss a Super Bowl Club will not only lose a member at the kickoff of Super Bowl XLV, but the person will not be able to root for their favorite team? | |
Ranveer Singh | 8,100 | ... that Ranveer Singh had to stay at Delhi University and prepare for his role as Bittoo Sharma of Delhi, in his debut film Band Baaja Baaraat? | |
Suillus salmonicolor Partial veil |
7,000 + 1,100 = 8,100 | ... that slippery Jills wear a baggy veil? | |
Casper the Commuting Cat Casper (cat) |
5,100 + 2,900 = 8,000 | ... that Casper the Commuting Cat is a book about the true story of a cat who was a regular bus commuter in Plymouth, England? | |
AAM-A-1 Firebird | 8,000 | ... that the AAM-A-1 Firebird (pictured on DB-26) was the first air-to-air missile to be developed following the end of World War II? | |
Seneb | 8,000 | ... that the dwarf Seneb (sculpture pictured) overcame his diminutive size to become a high-ranking royal official in ancient Egypt, marry a priestess and own thousands of cattle? | |
Ain Dara temple | 7,600 | ... that fortuitous finding of a colossal basalt lion (pictured) in 1955 led to discovery of the Ain Dara temple near Aleppo in Syria, which was built in three structural phases between 1300 BC and 740 BC? | |
ClariS | 7,300 | ... that the Japanese pop music female duo ClariS have not released photos of themselves to the public, and instead have employed illustrators to draw their likenesses? | |
Joachim Meichssner | 7,300 | ... that Colonel Joachim Meichssner refused to kill Hitler in a suicide attack because he could not bear the stress of waiting? | |
Niagara Parkway | 7,300 | ... that Winston Churchill, after being driven down the Niagara Parkway, described it as "the prettiest Sunday afternoon drive in the world"? | |
Tewkesbury Medieval Festival | 7,300 | ... that 2,000 people in medieval garb re-enacted the Battle of Tewkesbury at the 2003 Tewkesbury Medieval Festival, one of the "ten most bizarre festivals" in England? | |
Techno Viking | 7,000 | ... that Techno Viking has received more than 20 million clicks on YouTube and given rise to more than 700 responses and remixed versions? | |
Zliten mosaic | 6,853 | ... that the Zliten mosaic (portion pictured) is an ancient Roman floor mosaic from about the 2nd century AD that depicts gladiators and scenes from ordinary life?" | |
Antioch mosaics | 6,700 | ... that over 300 mosaic floors (example pictured) were discovered during archaeological excavations of Antioch between 1932 and 1939? | |
HMS Nimble (1826) Guerrero (ship) |
5,000 + 1,670 = 6,670 | ... that in 1827, HMS Nimble, an anti-slave patrol, ran aground near the Florida Keys while engaged in a gun battle with the Spanish slave ship Guerrero, which also ran aground and sank? | |
Belitung shipwreck | 6,486 | ... that the Belitung shipwreck was an Arabian dhow which was sewn together, held the "Tang treasure" and the largest gold Tang cup ever found? | |
ROKS Choi Young (DDH-981) MV Samho Jewelry |
4,830 + 1,528 = 6,358 | ... that the South Korean naval vessel Choi Young (pictured) launched a rescue operation that freed the tanker Samho Jewelry from Somali pirates with only one hostage injured? | |
John David Duty | 6,331 | ... that John David Duty is the first person to be executed in the United States with pentobarbital, which is commonly used for animal euthanasia? | |
2.25-Inch Sub-Caliber Aircraft Rocket | 6,300 | ... that during World War II, bomber pilots of the United States Navy learned how to launch aerial rockets using SCARs? | |
Balancing Rocks | File:Zimbabwe : 2007 Obverse.jpg | 6,300 | ... that the popularity of the Balancing Rocks formation grew when the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe featured it on certain issues of Zimbabwean banknotes (pictured), including the current series? |
James Dutton (Royal Marines officer) | 6,200 | ... that Royal Marine Lieutenant General Sir James Dutton (pictured) was sent to The Pentagon as a liaison in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in 2001? | |
Gris-gris (talisman) | 6,200 | ... that, according to a 1982 survey, Gris-gris were one of the top-three forms of birth control known to women in Senegal? | |
Bonetown | 6,100 | ... that Comedy Central's South Park was the "number one influence" for the humor in the adult video game Bonetown, a game which encourages the player to have sex with as many women in-game as possible? | |
GT-1 (missile) | 6,100 | ... that the GT-1 could deliver a torpedo up to 25 miles (40 km) from its launching aircraft? | |
Calliactis parasitica | 6,000 | ... that the mutualism between hermit crabs and the sea anemone Calliactis parasitica (pictured) may require the presence of an octopus? | |
Charles Dvorak | 6,000 | ... that Charles Dvorak (pictured) missed the pole vault finals at the 1900 Olympics after being told the event was postponed, but returned to win the gold medal at the 1904 Olympics? | |
Moyes Dragonfly | 6,000 | ... that the Moyes Dragonfly ultralight aircraft was designed for the specialised role of towing hang gliders, but is also used for herding livestock? | |
Martin D-45 | 5,900 | ... that commanding prices up to $400,000, pre–World War II versions of the Martin D-45 guitar (first made for Gene Autry) are the most expensive production-model guitars in the United States? | |
Ed Westcott | 5,600 | ... ... that, before Ed Westcott photographed J. Robert Oppenheimer holding a cigarette (pictured), he gave the physicist money so he could buy cigarettes? | |
Callipogon relictus | 5,500 | ... that Callipogon relictus (pictured) is the largest beetle of Russia, reaching a length of 110 mm (4.3 in)? | |
Cortinarius vanduzerensis | 5,500 | ... that the mushroom Cortinarius vanduzerensis (pictured) is so slimy that it has been described as "much too slippery to be of value"? | |
Shchi | 5,400 | ... that the two-letter Russian word щи is transliterated with eight letters in German? | |
Farman Moustique | 5,334 | ... that the Farman Moustique, a French sport and training monoplane from the 1930s, was sold with an optional dog compartment? | |
Marguerite (woman of color) | 5,300 | ... that in 1805 Marguerite was the first slave to file a freedom suit in St. Louis, and she gained an end to Indian slavery in Missouri? | |
THUMS Islands | 5,300 | ... that the THUMS Islands in California are camouflaged drilling rigs named in honor of NASA astronauts who died in accidents? | |
Organ Pipes National Park | 5,200 | ... that the Organ Pipes National Park, which has 400 million year old volcanic formations, features hexagonal basalt columns (pictured) known as the "Organ Pipes"? | |
SA-500D | 5,200 | ... that NASA engineers shook a Saturn V test vehicle (S-IC stage pictured) for over 400 hours to ensure it would withstand the rigors of launch? | |
Pratt-Read LBE | 5,126 | ... that the Pratt-Read LBE glider bomb was intended to be guided by television signals and radio control? | |
Sylvester H. Roper Roper steam velocipede |
1,400 + 3,700 = 5,100 | ... that Sylvester H. Roper's steam velocipede (pictured) of 1867–1869 is one of three candidates for the title of first motorcycle? | |
Lump (dog) | 5,100 | ... that a dachshund named Lump once ate a work by Pablo Picasso? | |
El Grande (tree) | 5,100 | ... that the eucalyptus El Grande, Australia's largest tree, was killed by forestry officials by mistake? |
March 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Walter Koch (Fallschirmjäger) | 31,200 | ... that German paratrooper Walter Koch (pictured) acted against the Commando Order and saved John Dutton Frost's British paratroopers from execution? | |
Gleno Dam | 30,400 | ... that, in 1923, the Gleno Dam (pictured) in Italy failed shortly after it was completed and its flooding killed at least 356 people? | |
Godley Statue | 18,900 | ... that after the Godley Statue (pictured) toppled during the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, time capsules were discovered in its plinth? | |
Batman, Turkey Batman River Batı Raman oil field | 3,900+2,500+8,700 =15,100 |
... that the largest oil field in Turkey lies near the city of Batman and the Batman River? | |
Linni Meister | 15,000 | ... that glamour model Linni Meister appeared nude in the music video for her single "My Ass" which was released as promotion for the 2009 Norwegian comedy-horror film Dead Snow? | |
Transformer (flying car) | 14,200 | ... that the U.S. military hopes to incorporate Transformers into its combat units? | |
1965 Skyways Coach-Air Avro 748 crash | 13,958 | ... that although the 1965 Skyways Coach-Air Avro 748 crash ended with the passengers hanging upside down in their seats, they all survived? | |
Joanne Siegel | 13,600 | ... that Joanne Siegel (pictured) was the original model for Lois Lane and later married Superman's co-creator? | |
List of people who adopted matronymic surnames | 13,500 | ... that Marilyn Monroe, Dr. Seuss, Elvis Costello, and Prince Philip all adopted matronymic surnames? | |
Nimrud Ivories | 13,500 | ... that crime writer Agatha Christie used her face cream to clean the more than 2500-year-old Nimrud Ivories (example pictured) after their excavation? | |
Zenga Zenga | 13,400 | ... that the Libyan opposition has embraced "Zenga Zenga", an Israeli-created auto-tuned song and viral YouTube video that parodies Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi (pictured)? | |
Český Šternberk Castle | 12,242 | ... that Český Šternberk Castle (pictured) appears several times in the Albanian-Czech movie The Sorrow of Mrs. Schneider? | |
Wrath of the Titans | 12,200 | ... that Wrath of the Titans, the upcoming sequel to the 2010 film Clash of the Titans, is being shot in 3-D rather than being converted to 3-D like its predecessor? | |
Despina Storch | 12,200 | ... that alleged German spy Despina Storch was described as "Turkish Delight", "Turkish beauty", and a "modern Cleopatra" in spy literature? | |
Dear Friend Hitler | 12,100 | ...that Dear Friend Hitler, an Indian film, centres on letters written from Mahatma Gandhi to Adolf Hitler? | |
Operation Moolah | 12,100 | ... that Operation Moolah was an attempt during the Korean War by the United States Air Force to capture a fully operational Russian MiG-15? | |
Lockington Locks | 11,800 | ... that the Lockington Locks (pictured) lay at the end of the highest point on the Miami and Erie Canal? | |
Honda CBR250R (2011) | 11,500 | ... that the 2011 Honda CBR250R sport bike (pictured), styled after the VFR1200F, shows design influence from the Chrysler 300 car? | |
Indian rolling | 11,400 | ... that an incident of Indian rolling led to the death of three Navajos in 1974? | |
Gaman (term) | 10,900 | ... that the Japanese have been regarded as demonstrating "gaman" in the wake of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami? | |
Charles F. Watkins | 10,800 | ... that Michigan Wolverines baseball player and coach Charles F. Watkins (pictured) sustained severe burns from an X-ray machine, which ultimately resulted in his death? | |
Luke Matheny | 10,600 | ... that Luke Matheny, whose hair was described as "a vast black bouffant that makes him look like an untidy microphone", began his Academy Award acceptance speech by joking, "I should've gotten a haircut"? | |
Kepler-11b Kepler-11c Kepler-11d Kepler-11e Kepler-11f (March 31, 2011) |
6,900 + 928 + 646 + 625 + 1,300 = 10,399 | ... that the orbits of exoplanets Kepler-11b, Kepler-11c, Kepler-11d, Kepler-11e, and Kepler-11f can fit within the orbit of Mercury? | |
Selphyl | 9,800 | ... that in the U.S., vampire facelifts are not approved by the FDA? | |
Malati Dasi | 9,647 | ... that a US-born ex-hippie Malati Dasi, despite fierce opposition, in 1998 became the first international female leader of the Hare Krishna movement? | |
Rolleston Statue | 9,600 | ... that the 2011 Christchurch earthquake broke the neck on the Rolleston Statue (pictured)? | |
Battle of Ismailia | 9,500 | ... that when the ceasefire was issued to end the Battle of Ismailia, some Israeli paratroopers and Egyptian Sa'iqa found that they were no more than 20 meters apart? | |
Brown Willy Cairns | 9,500 | ... that the Brown Willy Cairns (pictured) are two man-made rock piles situated on the highest ridge in Cornwall? | |
Sydenham Heritage Church | 9,100 | ... that the Sydenham Heritage Church (pictured), twice threatened by demolition since 1997, was demolished without authorisation after the 2011 Christchurch earthquake? | |
Emilia Carr | 8,900 | ... that Emilia Carr is the first woman from Marion County, Florida to be sentenced to death since Aileen Wuornos in 1992? | |
Al Szolack | 8,700 | ... that that Al Szolack lost all 245 professional basketball games he ever played in? | |
Air-tractor sledge | 8,700 | ... that the air-tractor sledge, the first aeroplane to be taken to Antarctica, went without wings? | |
Anna Murray-Douglass | 8,524 | ... that Anna Murray (pictured) helped her future husband, Frederick Douglass, escape slavery by giving him sailor's clothes and a part of her savings? | |
Deeringothamnus pulchellus Deeringothamnus rugelii | 5,100+3,200 =8,300 |
... that despite their names, white squirrel banana and yellow squirrel banana are not bananas, but rare custard apples in Florida, and their fruits are berries? | |
HMS Mendip (L60) | 8,300 | ... that HMS Mendip (L60) served in the navies of three other countries after her use by the Royal Navy in World War II? | |
Ivy Alvarez | 8,100 | ... that award-winning poet and Cardiff resident Ivy Alvarez (pictured) was born in the Philippines, grew up in Tasmania, has worked in Scotland, Ireland, and Spain, and had her first book published in the US? | |
Marathon Dam | 8,100 | ... that the Marathon Dam (pictured) in Greece is coated with the same Pentelikon marble used to construct the Parthenon and is symbolic of the Battle of Marathon? | |
Crash Position Indicator | 8,000 | ... that shortly after it was introduced, the Crash Position Indicator was credited with saving the life of a critically injured airman? | |
The Mouse Problem | 7,900 | ... that the Monty Python sketch "The Mouse Problem", a mockumentary about men who want to be mice, parodies 1960s TV documentaries on homosexuality? | |
Fred Rehor | 7,861 | ... that Fred Rehor (pictured), a 256-pound pharmacy student from the University of Michigan, helped lead the 1917 Massillon Tigers to the "world's professional football championship" against Jim Thorpe's Canton Bulldogs? | |
Maxberg specimen | 7,800 | ... that the Maxberg specimen, one of only 10 Archaeopteryx specimens ever found, has been lost since 1991? | |
Pleasure Dissociative Orgasmic Disorder | 7,400 + 200= 7,600 | ... that people who suffer from Pleasure Dissociative Orgasmic Disorder are unable to feel pleasure from an orgasm? | |
Peter Cleary | 7,400 | ... that the Cork Examiner described the killing of Peter Cleary, the first person to be killed by the Special Air Service in Northern Ireland, as "an act of utter folly"? | |
Penguins–Islanders brawl | 7,400 | ... that, following a brawl-filled game, Pittsburgh Penguins team owner Mario Lemieux (pictured) questioned whether he still wanted to be a part of the National Hockey League? | |
Philemon Pownoll | 7,400 | ... that Captain Philemon Pownoll (pictured), killed in battle in 1780, was a mentor for future admirals Sir John Borlase Warren and Sir Edward Pellew? | |
Lernaeocera branchialis | 7,300 | ... that a young Lernaeocera branchialis is an ectoparasitic crustacean on the gills of a flounder or lumpsucker, and it moves on to cod or related fishes after it has matured and mated (infested gills of a whiting pictured)? | |
Murder of Koby Mandell and Yosef Ishran | 7,300 | ... that the stoning murder of two Israeli boys on the outskirts of their settlement in the Judean desert in 2001 led to U.S. legislation cracking down on killers of Americans overseas? | |
St Faith's Church, Little Witchingham | 7,000 | ... that St Faith's Church, Little Witchingham, (pictured) in Norfolk had fallen into ruin by the time its medieval wall paintings were rediscovered in 1967? | |
Great Reality TV Swindle | 6,900 | ... that in 2002, a British man working in a bookstore conned 30 people into leaving their homes and quitting their jobs? | |
Matthieu Borsboom Richard Rossmanith | 4,300+2,600 =6,900 |
... that Matthieu Borsboom (pictured), the current head of the Royal Netherlands Navy, previously served with ISAF in Afghanistan until he was succeeded by German Major General Richard Rossmanith? | |
United States v. Lee | 6,900 | ... that in United States v. Lee (1882), the Supreme Court held that a jury had properly ordered that the U.S. government return Arlington National Cemetery to the heir of Confederate General Robert E. Lee? | |
Operation Kita | 6,900 | ... that during Operation Kita in February 1945, six Imperial Japanese Navy warships, sailing from Singapore to Japan, evaded the 26 Allied submarines which were positioned to attack them? | |
ILoo | 6,800 | ... that the iLoo was a cancelled Microsoft project by British subsidiary MSN UK to develop a Wi-Fi-enabled Internet portable toilet for summer festivals? | |
Sophismata | 6,400 | ... that depending on the interpretation, sophismata like "All men are donkeys or men and donkeys are donkeys" can either be true or false? | |
Saigō-no-Tsubone | 6,300 | ... that Saigō-no-Tsubone, or "Lady Saigo" (pictured), was a concubine who advised Tokugawa Ieyasu before the 1575 Battle of Nagashino, a major turning point in the history of Japan? | |
Santa Maria de Ovila | 6,000 | ... that William Randolph Hearst removed 10,000 stones of the Spanish monastery Santa Maria de Ovila (pictured), but never used them in a building? | |
Joseph Schleifstein | 5,700 | ... that Joseph Schleifstein arrived at the Buchenwald concentration camp at age two, and survived because his father hid him in a sack? | |
Wyntoon | 5,700 | ... that 26-year-old John F. Kennedy swam in the freezing McCloud River while wintering with William Randolph Hearst at Wyntoon? | |
Patriarchal Cathedral of the Holy Ascension of God | 5,600 | ... that the high medieval Patriarchal Cathedral (pictured) atop the Tsarevets hill in Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, has had its interior repainted in a modernist style? | |
Al Karama, United Arab Emirates | 5,600 | ... that according to its original constitution, the capital of the United Arab Emirates is Al Karama, but no such city actually exists? | |
Lyttelton Timeball Station | 5,500 | ... that Lyttelton Timeball Station, one of only five remaining time balls in working order worldwide until the 2010 Canterbury earthquake, is to be demolished? | |
Reuben Wells (locomotive) | 5,500 | ... that for 30 years the Reuben Wells steam engine (pictured), now displayed at The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, pushed train cars up the steepest railroad incline in the United States? | |
1940 Brocklesby mid-air collision | 5,400 | ... that on 29 September 1940, two Avro Ansons collided in mid-air over Brocklesby, Australia, became locked together in "piggyback" fashion, and then successfully landed in a field? | |
Monty the meerkat | 5,400 | ... that in September 2007, Monty the meerkat made headlines in The Times, The Daily Telegraph, The Sun, and other leading newspapers for his purported ability to take pictures with a digital camera? | |
Portrait of Père Tanguy | 5,400 | ... that the final Portrait of Père Tanguy (pictured) was purchased by the sculptor Auguste Rodin and now resides in his museum in Paris? | |
Theo Berger | 5,300 | ... that Bavarian criminal Theo Berger, despite escaping four times, spent 36 years in jail and committed suicide there in 2003? | |
Becky Edelsohn | 5,300 | ... that anarchist Becky Edelsohn was the first woman to attempt a hunger strike in the United States? | |
Victoria Affair | 5,200 | ... that while inspecting the cargo of the freighter Victoria, Israeli naval commandos found 50 tons of weapons concealed beneath bags of cotton and lentils from Syria? | |
Xochimilco | 5,200 | ... that the canals and chinampas of Xochimilco (pictured), a World Heritage Site in Mexico City, are in danger of disappearing within 50 years? | |
Gare de Bellegarde | 5,200 | ... that when Gare de Bellegarde (current station building pictured) opened in 1858 as part of the Lyon–Geneva railway, the station building was built in the style of a Swiss chalet? | |
Balquhain | 5,200 | ... that three lunar alignments of the Balquhain stone circle near Inverurie in Scotland were discovered in the 1980s? | |
Estacado, Texas | 5,100 | ... that the ghost town of Estacado, Texas, was founded by Quakers as a farming community? |
April 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Dacian Draco | 21,700 | ... that at the height of battle the wolf's head of the Dacian Draco (pictured), with its several metal tongues, made a shrill sound and its strips of material waved in the wind? | |
Frances Howard, Duchess of Richmond | 21,100 | ... that Frances Howard, Duchess of Richmond (pictured) was known as the "Double Duchess"? | |
Baron of Arizona | 20,600 | ... that the U.S. government imprisoned the Baron of Arizona (pictured) after learning he had damaged books in Mexican and Spanish libraries? | |
Ethiopian eunuch | 17,700 | that the Ethiopian eunuch (pictured) has been described as the "first baptized gay Christian"? | |
William Brill | 15,800 | ... that during a raid on Berlin in 1944, RAAF Squadron Leader Bill Brill's (pictured) Avro Lancaster was struck by incendiary bombs dropped by another Allied aircraft above him? | |
Lion Gate | 14,100 (12,600+1,500) |
... that the Lion Gate (pictured), the main entrance of the Bronze Age citadel of Mycenae in Greece, is the sole surviving monument of Mycenaean sculpture? | |
George (dog) | 13,800 | ... that George, a Jack Russell Terrier, died from injuries sustained while protecting several children from an attack by two Pit Bulls? | |
George Washington Masonic National Memorial | 13,800 | ... that the George Washington Masonic National Memorial (pictured) was proposed in 1852, began construction in 1922, dedicated in 1932, and finished in 1970? | |
Pelican Pete | 13,500 | ... that the world's largest pelican is over 15 feet (4.6 m) high? | |
Spill (audio) | 13,300 | ... that although audio spill is often undesirable in the recording of popular music, it can be heard on records by The Beatles and Christina Aguilera? | |
Salaì | 12,700 | ... that Leonardo da Vinci's student Salaì painted a nude version of the Mona Lisa called Monna Vanna (pictured)? | |
Ray William Johnson | 12,500 | ... that Ray William Johnson is the second most subscribed person on YouTube? | |
Self-propelled particles | 12,200 | ... that the concept of self-propelled particles can explain why flocking birds (pictured) suddenly change direction for no apparent reason, or abruptly switch from a flying state to a landing state? | |
Jack the Giant Killer (2012 film) | 12,200 | ... ... that the upcoming 2012 film, Jack the Giant Killer directed by Bryan Singer is expected to take an adult look at the Jack and the Beanstalk legend? | |
Colin Campbell Cooper | 12,000 | ... that American artist Colin Campbell Cooper helped rescue survivors of the Titanic, and during the rescue created several paintings (example pictured) which document the events? | |
CTV Building | 11,500 | ... that more than 100 people died in the CTV Building (ruins pictured) in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake? | |
Spill (audio) | 11,500 | ... that although audio spill is often undesirable in the recording of popular music, it can be heard on records by The Beatles and Christina Aguilera? | |
Tomb of Akhethetep and Christiane Ziegler | 7,900 + 3,000 = 10,900 | ... that Christiane Ziegler excavated the Tomb of Akhethetep (pictured) from 1991–1999? | |
History of the horse in Britain | 10,400 | ... that the early Britons were skilled horsemen and faced Julius Caesar with a well-organized force of 4,000 horse-drawn chariots? | |
Klee–Minty cube & Criss-cross algorithm |
10,381 (5,845 + 4,536 ) |
... that, while the criss-cross algorithm visits all eight corners of the Klee–Minty cube when started at a worst corner, it visits only three more corners on average when started at a random corner? | |
Kawasaki's theorem | 10,300 | ... that according to Kawasaki's theorem, an origami crease pattern with one vertex may be folded flat (pictured) if and only if the sum of every other angle between consecutive creases is 180º? | |
German prisoners of war in the United States | 9,800 | ... that 425,000 German prisoners of war were held in 700 camps throughout the United States during World War II? | |
Wildlife of the Falkland Islands | 9,300 | ... that the wildlife of the Falkland Islands includes no native terrestrial reptiles, amphibians, or even trees, and that the only native terrestrial mammal, the warrah (pictured), became extinct in the mid-19th century? | |
HMS Prince William (1780) | 9,200 | ... that HMS Prince William was named for the future King William, who was present at the engagement she was captured in? | |
Andrew Harclay, 1st Earl of Carlisle | 9,000 | ... that Edward II of England made Andrew Harclay (pictured) Earl of Carlisle in 1322, only to have him hanged, drawn and quartered less than a year later? | |
The Man in the Moone | 8,900 | ... that The Man in the Moone, a 1638 book (frontispiece and title page pictured) by the English bishop Francis Godwin, is considered one of the first science fiction books? | |
Rushbearing | 8,500 | ... that the ancient British custom of rushbearing (pictured) was opposed by the Puritans, probably for encouraging intemperance, but deemed acceptable by King James I in his Declaration of Sports? | |
Myth of Skanderbeg | 8,097 (7,300+797) | ... that the Myth of Skanderbeg is one of the main constitutive myths of Albanian nationalism? | |
Stele of the Vultures | 7,800 | ... that the Stele of the Vultures (fragment pictured) celebrates a victory of Eannatum of Lagash (2460 BC) over Umma in southern Mesopotamia? | |
Jurassic Museum of Asturias | 7,745 | ... that among the replicas exhibited in the Jurassic Museum of Asturias in Colunga, Spain, are the copulating Tyrannosaurus rex dinosaurs (pictured)? | |
Cyclida | 7,637 | ... that cycloids are believed to have been driven to extinction when crabs spread across their territory? | |
Celts in Transylvania | 7,600 | ... that Celts (helmet pictured) once inhabited Transylvania? | |
Carl Lundgren | 7,500 | ... that Cubs' pitcher Carl Lundgren (pictured) had "speed to burn green hickory and an assortment of curves that would keep a cryptograph specialist figuring all night but he was wild as a March hare in a cyclone"? | |
Two-mass-skate bicycle | 7,500 | ...that a two-mass-skate bicycle has demonstrated self-stability even though it has minimal gyroscopic effects and does not have positive trail, two features most commonly associated with bike stability? | |
Knoxville Riot of 1919 | ~7,500 (6,900 + 666) | ... that the Knoxville Riot of 1919, one of the events of that year's Red Summer, began when a lynch mob stormed the jail in pursuit of a man believed to have been the mayor's illegitimate son? | |
Douglas 2229 | 7,100 | ... that after plans for the Douglas 2229 SST left no room for fuel other than in the fuselage, a designer sketched a cartoon with diving suit-clad passengers immersed in fuel, under "No Smoking" signs? | |
HMS Diamond (H22) | 7,100 | ... that the British destroyers HMS Diamond (pictured) and HMS Wryneck were sunk by German aircraft on 27 April 1941, about four hours after they rescued over 500 troops from a sinking Dutch troopship? | |
Großgaststätte Ahornblatt | 6,900 | ... that the Großgaststätte Ahornblatt, a concrete building in the shape of a maple leaf in former East Berlin, was built in 1973 and demolished in 2000? | |
Stalin's poetry | 6,800 | ... that before he entered politics, Joseph Stalin's poetry was widely read and much admired in Georgia? | |
Volkmar Wentzel | 6,400 | ... that, in 1960, Volkmar Wentzel photographed Capt. Joseph Kittinger making a record-setting 102,800-foot (31,300 m) skydive (pictured)? | |
Shoot to Kill (1990 TV drama) | ~6,400 (5,500 + 913) | ... that Shoot to Kill (1990) had to be made as a drama documentary because many of its subjects had either been shot by the RUC, given new identities, or forbidden to talk by the Official Secrets Act? | |
HMS Polyanthus (K47) | 6,400 | ... that during convoy escort duty in the Battle of the North Atlantic in 1943, HMS Polyanthus was sunk by U-952 using new weapons technology? | |
Everybody Was in the French Resistance...Now! | 6,300 | ... that "G.I.R.L.F.R.E.N (You Know I've Got A)" by Everybody Was in the French Resistance...Now! is a reply to Avril Lavigne's song, "Girlfriend"? | |
Bobby Lowe | 6,000 | ... that Boston Beaneater Bobby "Link" Lowe (pictured) was the first Major League player to hit four home runs in a game and was selected in 1911 as the best utility player in baseball history? | |
Pensacola Dam | 6,000 | ... that Pensacola Dam on the Grand River in Oklahoma is referred to as the longest multiple-arch dam in the world, with 51 arches? | |
Landysh | 5,800 | ... that Landysh, a Russian vessel built with funding from Japan to decommission nuclear submarines, was requested by Japan to assist in the aftermath of the Fukushima I nuclear accidents? | |
Alecton discoidalis | 5,700 | ... that larvae of Cuban endemic firefly Alecton discoidalis (pictured) attack land snails? | |
Twenty-five Year Award | 5,700 | ... that the John Hancock Tower (pictured), in Boston, Massachusetts, won the Twenty-five Year Award thirty-five years after it was completed? | |
Zugspitze | 5,700 | ... that the first recorded ascent of Germany's highest mountain, the Zugspitze (pictured) on 27 August 1820, was led by a Bavarian Army officer, Josef Naus? | |
Davidka Square | 5,600 | ... that the homemade Israeli mortar memorialized in Jerusalem's Davidka Square was totally inaccurate, but it made such a huge noise that it sent the enemy fleeing in panic? | |
Law of Æthelberht | 5,600 | ... that the 7th-century Law of Æthelberht (first folio pictured), a Kentish legal text, is the earliest extant document in the English language? | |
The Fab Five (film) | 5,500 | ...that in response to Jalen Rose's comments in The Fab Five, which has become the highest-rated ESPN documentary, Grant Hill's response was shared by nearly 100,000 people on Facebook in the next few days? | |
SS British Corporal | 5,500 | ... that General Franco (pictured) denied the fact that the British merchant ship British Corporal had been attacked by his forces during the Spanish Civil War? | |
Alice Manfield | 5,400 | ... that Alice Manfield (pictured), commonly known as Guide Alice, worked as a mountain guide on Australia's Mt Buffalo for forty years from the 1890s? | |
Semper_Fidelis_(march) | 5,400 | ... that "Semper Fidelis" by John Philip Sousa is regarded as the official march of the United States Marine Corps? | |
The Egyptian Halls | 5,400 | ... that although described as one of the finest buildings in Glasgow, The Egyptian Halls may be demolished? | |
Charles Inglis (c. 1731–1791) | 5,400 | ... that Captain Charles Inglis (pictured) helped frustrate a planned French invasion of Britain? | |
Soybean Car | 5,300 | ... that the first car that had a body entirely of plastic was manufactured by the Ford Motor Company in 1941? | |
Perceptual trap | 5,300 | ... that the use of herbicide on the natural habitat of the Lesser Prairie Chicken may have created a perceptual trap? | |
Domonique Ramirez | 5,200 | ... that Miss San Antonio 2010 Domonique Ramirez temporarily lost her title after pageant officials complained that she had gained weight and allegedly told her to "get off the tacos"? | |
Measuring rod | File:Ashur5.jpg | 5,200 | ... that a measuring rod is depicted on both the Code of Hammurabi and the Tablet of Shamash (pictured)? |
Monastery of the Virgins | 5,200 | .. that archaeologists believe they have uncovered the Monastery of the Virgins described in a 6th-century account of Byzantine Jerusalem? | |
Wildlife of Cape Verde | 5,100 | ... that three million trees, including pine, oak, sweet chestnut, and acacia (pictured), are being planted every year as part of reforestation efforts in Cape Verde? | |
The Motherfucker With the Hat | 5,100 | ... that The Motherfucker With the Hat was the Broadway debut for actor Chris Rock? |
Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Batman Province | 38,300 | ... that Batman is half female? | |
Candy desk | 32,100 | ... that there is a desk full of candy (pictured) on the floor of the US Senate? | |
Labia minor | 27,700 | ... that a typical Labia minor is chocolate brown, up to 7 mm long, and is equipped with pincers? | |
Malus baccata | 26,100 | ... that 14-metre (46 ft) tall Siberian crabs are being used in experimental breeding programs? | |
La Pelegrina pearl | 24,500 | ... that a wanderer survived both the French Revolution of 1789–99 and the Russian Revolution 127 years later? | |
California Balloon Law | 22,700 | ... that the California Senate passed a bill making the sale of balloons (pictured) illegal in January 2011? | |
Sodium ethyl xanthate | 21,200 | ... that the Australian government requires high-risk sex workers to wear full-face respirators (example pictured)? | |
Diethyl azodicarboxylate | 18,600 | ... that even small amounts of dead cat can explode when heated? | |
Law Ting Holm | 18,400 | ... that nesting is not used by breeding Mute Swans but they do use this thing? | |
Clubfoot George | 16,900 | ... that Clubfoot George was executed by vigilantes because they believed that he was innocent? | |
Ntrepid | 15,900 | ... that Ntrepid was paid $2.76 million by the U.S. military to create sock puppets? | |
USCGC Chincoteague (WPB-1320), MY Titanic |
8,592+6,800= 15,392 | ... that in 2010, three survivors of the Titanic were rescued by the USCGC Chincoteague? | |
HMS Europa (1765), Smith Child (Royal Navy officer) |
4,400 + 10,500 = 14,900 | ... that Europe was ruled by a child during the American Revolutionary War? | |
Neoregelia 'Dr. Who' | 13,500 | ... that Dr. Who's parents are Brazilians from a family known for pineapples? | |
Sayyida al Hurra | 12,800 | ... that the noble lady Sayyida al Hurra became well respected for her booty? | |
Thomas Jefferson Hogg | 11,000 | ... that Thomas Jefferson wished to practice free love but the object of his affections became pregnant and gave birth to Frankenstein? | |
Jafr alien invasion | 10,600 | ... that in early 2010 reporters claimed that an unprecedented attack on Jordan was targeted at both terrorists from Al-Qaida and U.S. military bases? | |
Ice Cream (mango) | 9,800 | ... that ice cream grows in Florida? | |
Tumidotheres maculatus | 9,500 | ... that a species of crab, Tumidotheres maculatus, has been found living on an asteroid? | |
John Bastard (Royal Navy officer) | 9,500 | ... that a real Bastard commanded Africa in the nineteenth century? | |
Arsole | 8,800 | ... that recent quantum chemical calculations have established that arsoles are only moderately aromatic? | |
Climate of the Falkland Islands | 7,900 | ... that the Falkland Islands have on average only 2–3 hours of direct sunlight per day in winter and only 6 hours in summer? | |
Rudyard Kipling (ship) | 6,900 | ... that Rudyard Kipling's final resting place is at the bottom of the sea off the coast of Ireland? | |
United States v. Morris | 6,300 | ... that Robert Tappan Morris was convicted of a crime for releasing a worm? | |
Clough Creek and Sand Ridge Archeological District | 5,800 | ... that the inhabitants of the Sand Ridge Site ate drums? |
May 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Euthanasia Coaster | 86,300 | ... that the concept for the Euthanasia Coaster, a roller coaster designed to kill its riders, caused concern among anti-euthanasia groups when it went on display? | |
False potto | 21,900 | ... that the false potto may be a true potto (pictured)? | |
Pink Chanel suit of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy | 21,400 | ... that Jacqueline Kennedy wore her pink Chanel suit (pictured) at the inauguration of President Lyndon B. Johnson, even though it was stained with her husband's blood? | |
Meat dress of Lady Gaga | 19,900 | ... that the meat dress of Lady Gaga was to be preserved by being made into a type of jerky? | |
Black Versace dress of Elizabeth Hurley | 19,600 | ... that "That Dress", worn by Elizabeth Hurley at the premiere of Four Weddings and a Funeral in 1994, has been voted the greatest red carpet dress of all time and is perhaps Gianni Versace's best-known creation? | |
Green Versace "jungle" dress of Jennifer Lopez | 19,500 | ... that David Duchovny said, "I'm sure that nobody is looking at me", when standing beside Jennifer Lopez who was wearing her "jungle" Versace dress? | |
Palaeochiropteryx | 18,900 | ... that the many examples of extinct 48-million year old bat genus Palaeochiropteryx (life restoration pictured) found in the Messel lake may have drowned after being rendered unconscious in flight by poisonous volcanic gases? | |
Code of the Secret Service | 18,400 | ... that the film Ronald Reagan called "the worst picture I ever made" inspired Jerry Parr to join the Secret Service, and that Parr saved President Reagan's life during the 1981 assassination attempt (pictured)? | |
HMS Princess Irene | 16,200 | ... that there was only one survivor of the explosion which obliterated HMS Princess Irene (pictured) and killed 352 people? | |
Kalantaka | 15,500 | ... that the icon of "the Death of Death" is popular in South India? | |
Pierre Koffmann Pig's trotters La Tante Claire |
2,500 + 10,700 + 2,200 = 15,400 | ... that Pierre Koffmann served a signature dish of pig's trotter (pictured) with chicken mousseline, sweetbreads and morels at his three Michelin star restaurant La Tante Claire? | |
Patricia Horoho | 15,900 | ... that President Obama's nominee for Surgeon General of the United States Army, Patricia Horoho (pictured), gave first aid to 75 victims of the September 11 attacks? | |
Wedding dress of Kate Middleton | 15,200 | ... that dressmakers working on Kate Middleton's wedding gown (pictured) changed needles every three hours, and washed their hands every half hour? | |
Charlie Brown and Franz Stigler story | 15,000 | ... that during World War II, a Luftwaffe pilot, observing that there were several wounded crewmen on a United States Army Air Corps's plane, declined to fire and safely escorted it to the North Sea? | |
Debate between sheep and grain | 12,800 |
... that Edward Chiera considered the setting of the Debate between sheep and grain (example of sheep pictured) to be the Babylonian Garden of Eden? | |
4 (Beyoncé Knowles album) | 11,600 (23.5 - (11.3+12.5)/2) |
... that having "killed" her alter ego Sasha Fierce in 2010, Beyoncé Knowles planned to create her own mix of music genres with her fourth studio album, 4? | |
Ahalya | 11,600 | ... that according to Hindu mythology, the god-king Indra was cursed with having a thousand vagina marks on his body for having extra-marital sex with Ahalya (pictured)? | |
Osama bin Laden's house in Khartoum | 11,500 | ... that, while in Sudan, the late Osama bin Laden (pictured) lived in a pink stucco and brick house in Khartoum, and often weekended with his family in a one-storey mud house overlooking the Blue Nile in Soba? | |
White bikini of Ursula Andress | 11,500 | ... that the scene featuring Ursula Andress in her iconic white bikini in the 1962 James Bond film Dr. No has been voted No. 1 in "the 100 Greatest Sexy Moments" of cinema? | |
Women in Singapore | 11,400 | ... that there are three paradoxes confronting career women in Singapore? | |
2030 (novel) | 11,000 | ... that 2030: The Real Story of What Happens to America, a 2011 dystopian novel by Albert Brooks, was originally written as a movie script? | |
Smålandsstövare | 10,800 | ... that the Smålandsstövare (pictured) originates from dogs brought home by soldiers in the 16th century wars of the Swedish Empire? | |
Screaming Hairy Armadillo | 10,700 | ... that sand may form 50% of the stomach contents of a Screaming Hairy Armadillo (pictured)? | |
List of chronometers on HMS Beagle | 10,600 | ... that HMS Beagle's chronometers (example pictured) were so important to its mission that John Lort Stokes rescued one despite being speared in the chest by an indigenous Australian? | |
Tessaratomidae | 10,300 | ... that some species of giant stink bugs (example pictured) are edible? | |
America's Most Hated Family in Crisis | 10,100 | ... that the creation of the documentary film America's Most Hated Family in Crisis was prompted by an email? | |
Charles Brady King | 10,100 | ... that Charles Brady King made and drove the first automobile (pictured) in Detroit—three months before Henry Ford made his? | |
Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov | 9,900 | ... that during his life Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov (pictured) defeated an Ottoman fleet, seduced a princess, bred horses and chickens, and is alleged to have murdered a Tsar? | |
The Dog Pillow | 9,700 | ... that according to The Dog Pillow, wearing armour without underwear makes one's hair stand on end? | |
1st Filipino Infantry Regiment (United States) | 9,600 | ... that there was a segregated Filipino Infantry Regiment (insignia pictured) in the United States Army during World War II? | |
Battle for the Río San Juan de Nicaragua Fortress of the Immaculate Conception El Castillo (village) El Castillo (municipality) Rafaela Herrera |
2,700 + 4,300 + 440 + 287 + 1,700 = 9,427 | ... that during a 1762 British siege of the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception (pictured) in El Castillo village within El Castillo municipality, Nicaragua, Rafaela Herrera inspired the outnumbered Spanish defenders to victory? | |
Titanomyrma | 9,400 | ... that the discovery of the fossil giant ant Titanomyrma (pictured with a hummingbird) in Wyoming indicates that warmth-loving fauna spread through the north between Europe and America during hot spells in the Eocene? | |
Kegasus | 9,400 | ... that Kegasus, the centaur mascot of the infield party at the 2011 Preakness Stakes, has a nipple ring, body hair and a beer gut? | |
American Express Gold card dress of Lizzy Gardiner Lizzy Gardiner |
7,600 + 1,700 = 9,300 | ... that the American Express Gold card dress worn at the 67th Academy Awards by costume designer Lizzy Gardiner was made from 254 expired American Express cards? | |
William Ward (American football) | 9,200 | ... that Michigan football coach William Ward (pictured) later became a physician who experimented with the surgical creation of artificial vaginas? | |
Battle of Bautzen (1945) | 9,200 | ... that the Battle of Bautzen in 1945 was the bloodiest battle of the Polish Army since the Battle of Bzura in 1939? | |
Go the Fuck to Sleep | 9,200 | ... that Adam Mansbach's bedtime-book Go the Fuck to Sleep was No. 1 on Amazon.com's bestseller list on May 12, 2011—a month before its release—thanks to free advance copies emailed via PDFs? | |
Pisa Griffin | 9,100 | ... that the Pisa Griffin (pictured) is the largest known medieval Islamic metal sculpture, and may have been designed to emit noises? | |
Keith Thiele | 9,000 | ... that Keith Thiele (pictured), whose daring motorcycle escape during WWII has been compared to Steve McQueen's in The Great Escape, is one of only four New Zealanders to be awarded the DFC and two bars? | |
German destroyer Z13 Erich Koellner | 8,900 | ... that German destroyer Z13 Erich Koellner visibly tilted when hit by the 15-inch (380 mm) semi-armor piercing shells fired by the battleship HMS Warspite during the Second Battle of Narvik on 13 April 1940? | |
Eurypterus | 8,900 | ... that a fossil of the extinct sea scorpion Eurypterus (restoration pictured) was once thought to be a catfish? | |
Richard Laurence Marquette | 8,800 | ... that serial killer Richard Laurence Marquette was the first person to be an eleventh name on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list? | |
Wedding dress of Princess Alexandra of Denmark | 8,600 | ... that the wedding dress of Princess Alexandra of Denmark (pictured) was the first to be filmed of any royal family member? | |
Don't take it personally, babe, it just ain't your story | 8,200 | ... that Don't take it personally, babe, it just ain't your story has been described as a profoundly moving video game about love, sex and the internet? | |
Wedding dress of Lady Diana Spencer | 8,100 | ... that the wedding dress of Lady Diana Spencer became one of the most famous outfits in the world and featured a 25-foot (7.6 m) train? | |
Skinny triangle | 8,100 | ... that the skinny triangle is used by snipers to estimate target range? | |
Cry Macho | 8,100 | ... that filming for the now-on-hold Arnold Schwarzenegger movie project Cry Macho originally began in 1991 with Jaws star Roy Scheider in the lead role? | |
Longmen Grottoes | 8,000 | …that the approximately 1,400 caves of China's Longmen Grottoes contain about 100,000 statues, some of which are only 1 inch (25 mm) high, while the largest Buddha statue (pictured) is 57 feet (17 m) in height? | |
Wedding dress of Grace Kelly | 7,800 | ... that the wedding dress of Grace Kelly, characterized as "one of the most-beloved of all time", was designed by Helen Rose, a leading costume designer of the era for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)? | |
Taaffeite | 7,800 | ... that taaffeite, one of the world's rarest gemstones, is the first mineral known to contain both beryllium and magnesium as essential components? | |
Loire | 7,700 | ... that the Loire (pictured) is the longest river in France? | |
Lansdowne Road football riot | 7,600 | ... that some English fans, including members of Combat 18, gave the Nazi salute to the Irish national anthem before the Lansdowne Road football riot? | |
13th (Lancashire) Parachute Battalion | 7,500 | ... that after World War II, 252 men of the 13th (Lancashire) Parachute Battalion were charged with mutiny? | |
Nude Nuns with Big Guns | 7,400 | ... that Nude Nuns with Big Guns is a nunsploitation thriller film that is the subject of a copyright lawsuit against torrent users involving 5,865 IP addresses? | |
Wellington R. Burt | 7,400 | ... that industrialist Wellington Burt, once among the richest Americans, left his fortune to descendants yet unborn in his lifetime; his will's conditions were met in 2010—92 years after his death? | |
WASP-15 | 7,400 | ... that star WASP-15 has a planet whose large radius cannot be explained without some other factor, such as some form of internal heating? | |
Lolowah bint Faisal Al Saud | 7,300 | ... that Princess Lolowah (pictured) supports overturning the prohibition of women from driving in Saudi Arabia? | |
Cambriae Typus | 7,300 | ... that the Cambriae Typus map shows a sea monster in the Irish Sea? | |
HMY Alexandra | 7,200 | ... that the former British royal yacht Alexandra (pictured), sold to Norway in 1925, was sunk by Luftwaffe bombers when she tried to escape to the United Kingdom in 1940? | |
Sanmenxia Dam | 7,200 | ... that Sanmenxia Dam (pictured) on the Yellow River in the People's Republic of China was hailed as an engineering success after completion and its picture was printed on banknotes? | |
Desmond Arthur | 7,100 | ... that the ghost of Desmond Arthur is believed to have been haunting Montrose Airfield since 1916? | |
Run the World (Girls) | 7,100 | ... that Beyoncé Knowles hired 200 native African dancers to appear in her music video for "Run the World (Girls)"? | |
9th (Eastern and Home Counties) Parachute Battalion | 7,100 | ... that Paratroop dog Glen of the 9th Parachute Battalion was killed during the Normandy Landings and is buried in a British war cemetery? | |
Taaffeite | 7,000 | ... that taaffeite, one of the world's rarest gemstones, is the first mineral known to contain both beryllium and magnesium as essential components? | |
Aman Sveti Stefan | 7,000 | ... that a luxury hotel and resort on the islet of Sveti Stefan, Montenegro (pictured) has been described as a "'70s Adriatic playground on a hilly peninsula that's barely connected to the mainland"? | |
Rick Welts | 7,000 | ... that Phoenix Suns president and CEO Rick Welts became the first prominent American sports executive to come out as gay when he did so in an interview with The New York Times on May 15, 2011? | |
Chrono Trigger: Crimson Echoes | 6,900 | ... that Chrono Trigger: Crimson Echoes was in development from 2004 to 2009 before a cease-and-desist letter from Square Enix led to its cancellation? | |
James William Middleton | 6,800 | ... that James Middleton, the brother of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, baked 21 cakes for HELLO! magazine's 21st birthday? | |
Federico Fernández Cavada Adolfo Fernández Cavada |
5,600 + 1,200 = 6,800 | ... that Federico Fernández Cavada (pictured), Commander-in-Chief of Cuban forces during the Ten Years' War, and his brother Adolfo, were both former Union Army officers and US Consuls? | |
Pink Ralph Lauren dress of Gwyneth Paltrow | 6,800 | ... that the Ralph Lauren dress which Gwyneth Paltrow wore to the 71st Academy Awards in 1999 has been cited as bringing pink back into fashion? | |
Barry John | 6,700 | ... that The King retired after a girl curtsied to him? | |
Walt Disney's Riverfront Square | 6,700 | ... that Walt Disney's Riverfront Square in St. Louis, Missouri, was to have been entirely indoors, with artificial lighting simulating weather and time of day? | |
Black Givenchy dress of Audrey Hepburn | 6,700 | ... that the black Givenchy dress worn by Audrey Hepburn in the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany's has been called "perhaps the most famous little black dress of all time"? | |
Titanic Engineers' Memorial, Southampton | 6,600 | ... that the Titanic Engineers' Memorial (pictured) in Southampton was unveiled in front of a crowd of 100,000, who gathered in Andrews Park on 15 April 1914, two years after the disaster? | |
Motocycle | 6,500 | ... that a motocycle is not a two-wheeled bicycle with an engine, but a four-wheeled automobile? | |
Bride-buying | 6,400 | ... that bride-buying, although illegal, still takes place in some countries? | |
Jihadi tourism | 6,400 | ... that destinations for jihadi tourism have included a mosque in Hamburg and Somali terrorist training sites? | |
Unadilla class gunboat | 6,400 | ... that during the American Civil War, the U.S. Navy's Unadilla-class gunboats (example pictured) played a leading role in the capture of New Orleans? | |
Gunner (dog) | 6,400 | ... that during the bombing of Darwin in World War II, Gunner's hearing was so acute that he detected approaching Japanese aircraft before they showed up on radar? | |
David Werdyger | 6,300 | ... that future cantor David Werdyger was saved from a Nazi firing squad by singing the Jewish prayer for the dead? | |
Krotite | 6,200 | ... that the newly discovered mineral krotite likely was one of the earliest minerals formed in the Solar System? | |
Walt Disney's Riverfront Square | 6,200 | ... that Walt Disney's Riverfront Square in St. Louis, Missouri, was to have been entirely indoors, with artificial lighting simulating weather and time of day? | |
White floral Givenchy dress of Audrey Hepburn | 6,200 | ... that Time magazine voted the white floral Givenchy dress worn by Audrey Hepburn at the 1954 Academy Awards as the greatest Oscar dress of all time? | |
Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission | 6,200 | ... that the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission is named for the only Holocaust survivor (pictured) ever to serve in the United States Congress? | |
Susan Wicklund | 6,200 | ... that abortion provider Susan Wicklund has been obliged to wear disguises to get past protesters in airports and at her workplace? | |
Rocky Mountain Bank v. Google Inc. | 6,100 | ... that in Rocky Mountain Bank v. Google Inc., if a Gmail user had viewed a particular email, Google was ordered to disclose to a bank the user's real name? | |
Lacandon Jungle | 6,100 | ... that the Lacandon Jungle is one of the last forests in North America large enough to support jaguars? | |
Vermouth | 6,100 (5.4+2.4 - (1.6+1.7)/2) |
... that vermouth was originally consumed as a medicinal drink, but is now popular as a cocktail ingredient? | |
Bernard Trottier | 6,000 | ... that Conservative Party candidate Bernard Trottier won a seat in the 41st Canadian Parliament by defeating the incumbent Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada in the 2011 federal election? | |
The Sliced-Crosswise Only-On-Tuesday World | 6,000 | ... that the characters of "The Sliced-Crosswise Only-On-Tuesday World" are only allowed to experience one day a week? | |
Armoured trains of Poland | 6,000 | ... that armoured trains of Poland proved to be surprisingly successful during the Polish Defensive War of 1939? | |
Black and white Valentino dress of Julia Roberts | 6,000 | ... that Valentino Garavani cited the moment Julia Roberts collected her Academy Award for Best Actress wearing his gown as the high point of his 45-year career? | |
Formicium | 6,000 | ... that the extinct giant ant genus Formicium is known only from forewings found in Dorset, England and Tennessee, US? | |
M2 gas mask | 5,900 | ... that the M2 gas mask protected the wearer for at least five hours against the common World War I chemical weapon phosgene? | |
SS Santa Kyriaki | 5,900 | ... that over 70,000 cubic yards (54,000 m3) of sand was excavated to extricate the Liberian steamship Santa Kyriaki from a beach in the Netherlands? | |
Our City, Christchurch | 5,900 | ... that the design competition for Our City (pictured) caused much controversy, as the winning architect was young, inexperienced and proposed an architectural style that New Zealanders were unfamiliar with? | |
Waterside Inn | 5,900 | ... that in 2010, the Waterside Inn (pictured) became the first restaurant outside of France to hold three Michelin stars for 25 years? | |
Kaycee Nicole | 5,800 | ... that the perpetrator of the Kaycee Nicole hoax was investigated by the FBI but charges were never filed because the financial loss was not large enough? | |
VX-6 | 5,800 | ... that the first people to visit the South Pole since Robert Falcon Scott (1912) arrived in 1956 in a U.S. Navy R4D Skytrain (pictured) of the VX-6 squadron? | |
The Alchemist Discovering Phosphorus | 5,700 | ... that Joseph Wright of Derby's painting, The Alchemist Discovering Phosphorus (detail pictured), was only sold after his death, when all of his possessions were auctioned at Christie's? | |
German destroyer Z16 Friedrich Eckoldt | 5,700 | ... that the German destroyer Friedrich Eckoldt was sunk during the 1942 Battle of the Barents Sea when she mistook the British light cruiser Sheffield for the German heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper? | |
Tell Halula | 5,700 | ... that the first settlers of Tell Halula brought fully domesticated forms of wheat, barley and flax from somewhere else, circa 7750 BC? | |
Siam Cup | 5,600 | ... that the Siam Cup was hidden in an unknown place to prevent it from being melted down by the Nazis, and was only rediscovered in 1947? | |
Women in Laos | 5,600 | ... that although Laotian women (pictured) are constitutionally equal to Laotian men, due to inequalities in education only 63% are literate, compared with 83% of Laotian men? | |
Anna Letenská | 5,500 | ... that Czech actress Anna Letenská was killed by the Nazis for her alleged participation in the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich? | |
VXE-6 | 5,400 | ... that the first all-female crew to open up Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station was a Lockheed LC-130 crew of VXE-6 squadron (insignia pictured) in 1991? | |
United States military chaplain symbols | 5,400 | ... that the first Jewish chaplain in the U.S. Navy wore a cross? | |
Battle of the Echinades (1427) | 5,300 | ... that the Battle of the Echinades in 1427 was the last naval victory in the history of the Byzantine Empire? | |
Olivia Ward | 5,300 | ... that mezzo-soprano opera singer Olivia Ward won season 11 of US television show The Biggest Loser? | |
Lysimachia asperulifolia | 5,300 | ... that the endangered rough-leaved loosestrife of the Carolinas is threatened by the U.S. military? | |
Baron Carrickfergus | 5,200 | ... that the title Baron Carrickfergus was given to Prince William as a gift from Queen Elizabeth II for his wedding? | |
German destroyer Z12 Erich Giese | 5,200 | ... that the German destroyer Erich Giese managed to torpedo the British destroyer HMS Jersey during the night of 6/7 December 1939 without ever being spotted? | |
LIV (SO) Serval | 5,100 | ... that the German Light Infantry Vehicle for Special Operations is built on the chassis of the Mercedes-Benz G-Class? | |
Kingdom of the Little People | 5,100 | ... that the Kingdom of the Little People theme park in Kunming, China, requires its performers to be less than 51 inches (130 cm) tall? |
June 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Fortress of Mimoyecques | 51,700 | ... that the underground Fortress of Mimoyecques (pictured) was built by Nazi Germany to bombard London with 10 shells a minute using the V-3 supergun? | |
Olek | 23,900 | ... that participants in performance art by Polish-born American artist Olek (pictured) are literally crocheted into her body suits, without fasteners? | |
La Coupole | 22,200 | ... that the Second World War Allies feared that Nazi Germany intended to use a secret underground rocket base in France to fire ballistic missiles (V-2 pictured) at New York City? | |
List of fastest production motorcycles | 20,800 | ... that the competition to build the fastest production motorcycle raged for over a century, and then ended in a truce? | |
Magicicada neotredecim Decim periodical cicadas Brood XIX |
2,000+ 8,200+ 10,200= 20,400 |
... that a new species of decim periodical cicada (pictured) was discovered by studying the songs of Brood XIX, now re-emerging in 2011 after 13 years underground? | |
The Human Centipede II (Full Sequence) | 23,900- (5,400+4,800)/2 =18,800 |
... that The Human Centipede II (Full Sequence) has been banned by the British Board of Film Classification? | |
Daphne Oseña-Paez | 17,100 | ... that Filipina TV host Daphne Oseña-Paez (pictured) got her big break by waiting for a network executive in the ABS-CBN parking lot to show him a TV program that she filmed, shot, and edited herself? | |
Desegregation of the United States Marine Corps | 600 + 16,000 = 16,600 | ... that Howard P. Perry (pictured) was the first African American recruit in the United States Marine Corps? | |
Disney bomb | 15,500 | ... that the Disney bomb of the Second World War is thought to have been inspired by the Walt Disney cartoon Victory Through Air Power? | |
Armored Rat | 15,100 | ... that the Armored Rat (pictured) has spines which grow up to 33 millimetres (1.3 in) in length? | |
List of common false etymologies | 14,200 | ... that the f-word did not begin as an acronym, as is commonly claimed, but is of much older Proto-Germanic origin? | |
Dinocampus coccinellae | 14,100 | ... that the wasp Dinocampus coccinellae can turn a ladybird into a "zombie bodyguard"? | |
William P. Cronan | 13,000 | ... that American William P. Cronan (pictured), once described as "the most popular man in the Navy", lost two fingers when he shoved his hand in a breechblock to prevent a potentially deadly explosion? | |
Invisible Rail | 11,100 | ... that the most recent confirmed sighting of the vulnerable Invisible Rail was in 2003? | |
List of sections of Chester city walls and associated structures | 10,900 | ... that the Chester city walls (section pictured) form the most complete circuit of Roman and medieval defensive town walls in Britain? | |
Wildlife of Zanzibar | 10,600 | ... that the wildlife of Zanzibar included its own species of leopard (mounted specimen pictured) that survived from the ice age but may now be extinct? | |
Shin-kicking | 9,900 | ... that success in the sport of shin-kicking requires the ability to endure pain? | |
Beau (poem) | 9,600 | ... that when James Stewart recited his poem "Beau" on The Tonight Show, he moved host Johnny Carson to tears? | |
Seriously McDonalds | 9,500 | ... that McDonald's does not have a policy of charging African Americans more for their food? | |
Machine of Death | 9,300 | ... that after the science fiction anthology Machine of Death reached No. 1 on the Amazon.com bestseller list instead of his own book, Fox News commentator Glenn Beck denounced it as part of a liberal "culture of death"? | |
Nazi talking dogs | 9,000 | ... that Nazi scientists claimed to have trained a dog to call "Adolf Hitler" as "Mein Führer"? | |
Paula Barbieri | 9,000 | ... that Paula Barbieri was reportedly the last girlfriend of O. J. Simpson before the murder of Nicole Simpson and stuck with him during his trial? | |
Louisiana pancake batfish | 8,900 | ... that the rare Louisiana pancake batfish only lives in the area affected by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill? | |
Sun Weishi | 8,800 | ... that China's first female director was adopted by the first Premier of the People's Republic of China (pictured together in Moscow)? | |
Mike Jackson (right-handed pitcher) | 8,600 | ... that Michael Jackson played professional baseball? | |
List of places of worship in Arun Bailiffscourt Chapel Littlehampton Friends Meeting House Trinity Congregational Church, Arundel Angmering Baptist Church |
1,600 + 572 + 480 + 533 + 5,300 = 8,485 | ... that past and present churches in Arun, West Sussex, include one in the grounds of a luxury hotel, one in a former Penny School, one (pictured) that became a market, and a "strangely towered" one? | |
Percé Rock | 8,300 | ... that Percé Rock (pictured), one of the largest and most spectacular natural arches in the world, is an icon of the province of Quebec? | |
Christopher Hutton | 8,100 | ... that the inventions of Christopher Hutton helped 32 men escape successfully from World War II prisoner-of-war camp Colditz Castle (pictured)? | |
Medieval Merchant's House | 7,900 | ... that the Medieval Merchant's House (pictured) in Southampton was being used as a brothel when bomb damage during the Blitz revealed the building's important medieval architecture? | |
Mexican pointy boots | 7,800 | ... that Mexican pointy boots, made by elongating the toes of normal boots by as much as 5 feet (1.5 m), are popular among Mexican men in parts of Mexico and the U.S.? | |
Alcyonium digitatum | 7,800 | ... that the soft coral dead man's fingers (pictured) can live for 20 years? | |
Hubur | 7,800 | ... that the Sumerian "river of paradise", the Hubur (pictured), derived partly from real geography before becoming a demonic fantasy? | |
Bill Foley | 7,700 | ... that Bill Foley's photograph "The Last Smile" shows Anwar Sadat only moments before his assassination? | |
K computer | 8,600- (786+1,300)/2 =7,600 |
... that the world's fastest computer is the Japanese K? | |
1st Parachute Brigade (United Kingdom) | 7,600 | ... that the 1st Parachute Brigade earned their nickname Red Devils during the Tunisian Campaign? | |
Sofia Hellqvist | 7,100 | ... that glamour model Sofia Hellqvist, the current girlfriend of Swedish Prince Carl Philip, appeared in a photoshoot for the men's magazine Slitz in which she posed wearing only bikini bottoms and a live python? | |
1911 Sarez earthquake | 7,100 | ... that the 1911 Sarez earthquake triggered a huge landslide, forming the tallest dam in the world? | |
Hidden roof | 6,800 | ... that many Buddhist temples in Japan have a hidden roof? | |
Kremówka | 6,800 | ... that the kremówka cake gained international recognition after Pope John Paul II noted he once ate 18 of them as part of a bet? | |
African Owl | 6,700 | ... that the African Owl is actually a pigeon? | |
Nasothek | 6,600 | ... that a Nasothek (example pictured) is a collection of noses? | |
John Law Hume | 6,300 | ... that after John Law Hume, violinist on the RMS Titanic, was lost in the disaster, his family were sent an invoice for his uniform? | |
Jurang Pemisah Sabda Alam Konser Tur 2001 Dekade Senyawa |
2,500+ 800+ 1,300+ 300+ 1,800= 6,700 |
... that during his career, Chrisye released albums that sold like "chicken shit", were recorded with studio executives locked out, raised controversy for being "against Asian mores", went double platinum on his birthday, and had to be recalled to replace the cover design? | |
2011 New England tornado outbreak, 1995 Great Barrington tornado | 5,100 + 1,400=6,500 | ... that the 2011 New England tornado outbreak (EF3 in Springfield pictured) resulted in Massachusetts' first tornado fatalities since the 1995 Great Barrington tornado? | |
Samuel Bogart | 6,500 | ... that after murdering a man in Missouri, Samuel Bogart fled to Texas, where he became a Texas Ranger and a member of the State Legislature? | |
De Rivaz engine | 6,400 | ... that the world's first automobile powered by an internal combustion engine, the De Rivaz engine (model pictured), was made in 1807? | |
Pink dress of Marilyn Monroe | 6,400 | ... that the pink dress (pictured) which Marilyn Monroe wore in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) was emulated by Madonna in her video to Material Girl? | |
London Necropolis Railway | 6,300 | ... that the London Necropolis Railway was used to relocate the exhumed contents of at least 21 London graveyards to Brookwood Cemetery in Surrey? | |
Richard MacDonald | 6,300 | ... that sculptor Richard MacDonald (pictured) was a successful commercial illustrator until his late 30s when a fire destroyed his entire art studio along with all his illustrations and paintings? | |
McPike Mansion | 6,200 | ... that the McPike Mansion in Alton, Illinois, is reputed to be one of the most haunted houses in North America? | |
Titanic Musicians' Memorial, Southampton | 6,100 | ... that the Titanic Musicians' Memorial (pictured) in Southampton features the hymn, "Nearer, My God, to Thee", commonly believed to have been played as the ship went down? | |
Chuy | 6,100 | ... that the Uruguayan city of Chuy is only separated from the Brazilian city of Chuí by an avenue (pictured)? | |
William Thompson (journalist) | 6,100 | ... that newspaper editor Col. William Thompson won his 1871 shootout with a rival newspaper editor despite sustaining severe gunshot wounds, including a bullet lodged behind his eye, and a beating from a cane? | |
Blockhaus d'Éperlecques | 6,100 | ... that the Blockhaus d'Éperlecques was built in France by the Nazi Organisation Todt during World War II to launch V-2 missiles against England? | |
Jurang Pemisah, Sabda Alam, Konser Tur 2001, Dekade, Senyawa. | 2,200 + 731 + 1,100 + 377 + 1,600 = 6,008 | ... that during his career, Chrisye released albums that sold like "chicken shit", were recorded with studio executives locked out, raised controversy for being "against Asian mores", went double platinum on his birthday, and had to be recalled to replace the cover design? | |
Kesh temple hymn | 6,000 | ... that the Sumerian Kesh temple hymn (similar temple pictured) is one of the oldest texts? | |
MV Empire Darwin | 5,900 | ... that a Hawker Sea Hurricane (example pictured) from Empire Darwin was involved in the last action flown from a CAM ship, shooting down a Focke-Wulf Fw 200 on 28 July 1943? | |
Flåm Line NSB El 9 |
4,000+ 1,900=5,900 |
... that the Flåm Line, originally operated with El 9 locomotives, is the steepest standard gauge railway in Europe? | |
English Pouter | 5,900 | ... that Charles Darwin described the English Pouter (pictured) as "... the most distinct of all domesticated pigeons"? | |
The Green Men | 5,800 | ... that the Green Men wear green spandex suits while annoying the player(s) who sit inside the opposing team's penalty box during Vancouver Canucks games? | |
Perp walk | 5,800 | ... that the perp walk of Lee Harvey Oswald ended with his assassination on live television? | |
A Glorious Way to Die | 5,800 | ... that A Glorious Way to Die is a book about the World War II kamikaze mission of the world's largest battleship, the Yamato, against the American Pacific Fleet? | |
Garden of the gods (Sumerian paradise) | 5,730 | ... that in the Epic of Gilgamesh, the hero travelled through the cedars near Mount Hermon in Lebanon (pictured) to find the Garden of the gods? | |
Kölnbrein Dam | 5,600 | ... that the Kölnbrein Dam (pictured) is the tallest dam in Austria? | |
Barbara Longhi | 5,500 | ... that Barbara Longhi's painting Saint Catherine of Alexandria (pictured) is believed to be a self-portrait, presented as a devotional image to avoid the appearance of indulging in the sin of vanity? | |
Cornélie Falcon Stradella (opera) |
5,000+ 500= 5,500 |
... that the career of soprano Cornélie Falcon (pictured), star of the Paris Opéra, collapsed after she lost her voice in 1837 performing in the opera Stradella by Louis Niedermeyer? | |
The Broken Tower (film) | 5,400 | ... that the storyline of James Franco's upcoming film The Broken Tower started out as his master's thesis at New York University Tisch School of the Arts? | |
Franquet's Epauletted Fruit Bat | 5,300 | ... that Franquet's Epauletted Fruit Bat (pictured) is one of three fruit-eating bats found to be a reservoir for Ebola virus in the wild? | |
South American dreadnought race | 5,300 | ... that the Brazilian government's order for dreadnought battleships (one pictured) led to a South American naval arms race? | |
Patricia Preece | 5,300 | ... that Patricia Preece persuaded artist Stanley Spencer to divorce his wife, marry her, and sign his house over to her, but never left her lesbian lover? | |
Black Bear Ranch | 5,300 | ... that the Californian commune Black Bear Ranch was founded using money from both entertainment industry executives and from an LSD deal? | |
Tony Tetro | 5,300 | ... that while in parochial school, art forger Tony Tetro was hit by a nun after he painted her as a Vargas girl in a habit with a "pruney face"? | |
Sonderkommando Blaich | 5,300 | ... that, in February 1942, a lone German Heinkel He 111 from the Sonderkommando Blaich successfully attacked Free French Forces at Fort Lamy, Chad, but ran out of fuel on the return flight? | |
Lola Sanchez (Confederate spy) | 5,200 | ... that Lola Sanchez was a spy during the American Civil War who provided information to the Confederate Army, which led them to a victory over the Union Forces in the "Battle of Horse Landing"? | |
Coding (therapy) | 5,200 | ... that if the alternative therapeutic practice of coding is successful, patients will fear for their lives? | |
Cock ale | 5,200 | ... that Cock ale, described as a "provocative drink", was popular in 17th- and 18th-century England? | |
Shouwang Church | 5,200 | ... that Beijing police dedicate 4,500 officers to preventing the Shouwang Church from holding Sunday prayer meetings? | |
MV Empire Dawn | 5,100 | ... that although the continued attack by the German auxiliary cruiser Michel on Empire Dawn after she had surrendered was considered to be a war crime, Michel's captain was acquitted of the charge? | |
Aelita Andre | 5,100 | ... that Aelita Andre, an Australian artist who recently sold US$30,000 worth of paintings at a New York exhibition, is just four years old? | |
Ehrenbürg | 5,022 | ... that human sacrifices and perhaps cannibalism took place on the Ehrenbürg in Franconia during the Hallstatt and La Tène periods? |
July 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
Leroy Petry | 66,900- (925+5,100)/2= 63,900 |
... that Leroy Petry (pictured) is receiving the U.S. Medal of Honor today, marking only the second time that the award has been bestowed upon a living soldier for actions after the end of the Vietnam War? | |
Red or Black? | 23,300 | ... that Simon Cowell conceived the idea for Red or Black?, the most expensive game show ever made? | |
Murder of Julia Martha Thomas | 19,400 | ... that the severed head of Julia Martha Thomas, murdered, boiled and dismembered by her maid in 1879, was found next door to Sir David Attenborough's house in 2010? | |
Jean Thurel | 17,900 | ... that Jean Thurel (pictured) was a soldier in the French Régiment de Touraine for more than 90 years? | |
Tipu's Tiger | 14,400 | ... that the 18th-century Indian automaton Tipu's Tiger (pictured) shows a near life-size European being mauled by a tiger, and emits wails and grunts as well as containing a pipe organ? | |
Opposition to the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom | 13,800 | ... that, in 1898, the United States government annexed the Kingdom of Hawaii despite protestation from Queen Liliuokalani (pictured)? | |
Victoria Fyodorova Zoya Fyodorova |
5,100+ 8,100= 13,200 |
... that Joseph Stalin expelled an American Navy captain from Moscow after learning he had fathered a "love child" with a well-known Soviet film actress, who was then banished to Siberia for eight years? | |
Ephraim McLean Brank | 13,000 | ... that according to an account by a British officer, the marksmanship of Kentucky rifleman Ephraim McLean Brank (pictured) contributed more than anything else to the US victory at the Battle of New Orleans? | |
Svið | 13,000 | ... that Svið (pictured), a traditional Icelandic dish, consists of a sheep's head that has been cut in half, singed and boiled with the brain removed? | |
Capnomancy | 12,800 | ... that capnomancy was still practiced in New England as late as 2003? | |
Sempervivum tectorum | 12,400 | ... that many people still plant Jove's beard on the roofs of houses, as Charlemagne recommended? | |
Harley-Davidson XR-750 | 12,100 | ... that Evel Knievel's preferred stunt bike, the Harley-Davidson XR-750 (pictured), has won the most AMA Races? | |
Sonderbehandlung | 12,100 | ... that the Nazis documented murder and genocide during their perpetration of the Holocaust with euphemisms such as Sonderbehandlung? | |
Georgine Darcy | 11,500 | ... that the mother of Georgine Darcy, an actress in Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window, urged her to become a stripper? | |
Robert Mulka | 11,300 | ... that despite overseeing the construction of the crematoria and gas chambers at Auschwitz, what specifically shocked SS-Obersturmführer Robert Mulka at the camp was his colleagues' dress sense? | |
Macellum of Pozzuoli | 11,200 | ... that columns at the Roman Macellum of Pozzuoli (pictured) remained upright over centuries while the site sank below sea level, then re-emerged? | |
Morris Dam | 11,200 | ... that the reservoir of Morris Dam (pictured) in Los Angeles County, California, was used as a testing site for torpedoes and underwater missiles beginning in World War II? | |
Torrs Pony-cap and Horns | 11,100 | ... that scholars debate whether the Torrs Pony-cap and Horns (pictured) of c. 200 BC in the Museum of Scotland were intended to be worn by a horse, a human or a statue? | |
Battle of Drashovica | 10,900 | ... that during the Battle of Drashovica over 3000 German soldiers died, more than 200 of whom were inside the barracks of Drashovicë? | |
Russian ironclad Pervenets | 10,400 | ... that the Russian ironclad Pervenets was launched in the 1860s by the Imperial Russian Navy but was not scrapped by the Soviet Union until a century later during the 1960s? | |
BMW F650CS | 10,300 | ... that the 2001 BMW F650CS motorcycle's offbeat, "iMac-inspired" styling was meant to attract non-motorcyclists of the extreme sports generation? | |
Xavier Mertz | 10,300 | ... that Xavier Mertz is suspected to have died as a result of eating dog liver? | |
Death of Michael Gilbert | 10,000 | ... that Michael Gilbert was kept as a slave and regularly beaten by a family who eventually murdered him? | |
Station bell | 9,900 | ... that 1000 years ago Japanese officials used bells (pictured) to procure horses? | |
Liberty Place | 9,700 | ... that the construction of One Liberty Place was in breach of a "gentlemen's agreement" not to build any building taller than the statue of William Penn on Philadelphia City Hall (both buildings pictured)? | |
Three Emperors Dinner | 9,500 | ... that Tsar Alexander II of Russia had a special crystal bottle of Roederer champagne made for the Three Emperors Dinner in 1867 so he could admire the bubbles? | |
Robinson Crusoes of Warsaw | 9,400 | ... that Władysław Szpilman (pictured), whose life inspired the film The Pianist, was the most famous Robinson Crusoe of Warsaw, hiding in the ruins of Warsaw after the Nazis destroyed it? | |
Takabisha | 9,200 | ... that the steepest roller coaster in the world, with a drop angle of 121°, is Takabisha at the Fuji-Q Highland amusement park in Japan? | |
Jeff Mellinger | 9,000 | ... that when Jeff Mellinger, the last active-duty draftee in the U.S. Army from the Vietnam War era, received his draft papers, he thought that they were written to him by then-President Richard Nixon? | |
Io as an X-ray source | 9,000 | ... that one of Jupiter's moons, Io, is an X-ray source? | |
SR Battle of Britain class 21C151 Winston Churchill | 8,900 | ... that Winston Churchill's funeral train carried the headcode of a breakdown train? | |
Van de koele meren des doods Van de koele meren des doods (film) Nouchka van Brakel Renée Soutendijk |
2,900+ 994+ 565+ 4,400= 8,859 |
... that the Dutch novel Van de koele meren des doods (1900) was made into a movie in 1982 by Nouchka van Brakel, with Renée Soutendijk (pictured) starring as the sexually repressed main character? | |
Eduardo Avaroa Andean Fauna National Reserve | 8,800 | ... that the Eduardo Avaroa Andean Fauna National Reserve contains a "stone tree" (pictured)? | |
Frog Boys | 8,800 | ... that when the Frog Boys went missing, South Korean President Roh Tae-woo dispatched 300,000 police officers to search for them? | |
World War Z (film) | 11,200- (2,500+2,400)/2 =8,750 |
... that Brad Pitt's Plan B Entertainment beat Leonardo DiCaprio's production company in a bidding war for the rights to produce World War Z, an upcoming post-apocalyptic horror film? | |
Robertsbridge United Reformed Church | 8,700 | ... that the design of Robertsbridge United Reformed Church (pictured) in England has been described as "truly horrible" and "most dissolute"? | |
Nasi kucing | 8,700 | ... that the Javanese eat cat rice? | |
Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland | 8,600 | ... that among the Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland the most populous was the Warsaw Ghetto (pictured) with over 400,000 inhabitants crammed into an area of 1.3 sq mi (3.4 km2)? | |
Zinaida Reich | 8,600 | ... that Zinaida Reich was expelled from school at the end of the eighth grade in the tsarist Russia for her political activities? | |
Justice League Dark | 8,400 | ... that as part of the DC Universe reboot, Justice League Dark has been launched featuring some of DC Comics' more bizarre and supernatural characters? | |
Leotia lubrica | 8,400 | ... that jelly babies are considered inedible? | |
Gudea cylinders | 8,300 | ... that the Gudea cylinders (pictured) are the longest literary composition ever found in the Sumerian language? | |
Convoy HX 300 | 8,300 | ... that during the Second World War, 10 countries formed Convoy HX 300, which consisted of 166 ships covering an area 9 miles (14 km) wide and 4 miles (6.4 km) long? | |
Reportedly haunted locations in Scotland | 8,300 | ... that reportedly haunted locations in Scotland include a tenement where bubonic plague victims were quarantined and starved to death by local councilmen? | |
United Nations Honour Flag | 8,300 | ... that the United Nations Honour Flag was designed as a symbol of the Allies of World War II at the suggestion of Winston Churchill? | |
Paling in 't groen | 8,200 | ... that paling in 't groen (pictured) is a Flemish dish of eel in a green herb sauce? | |
Invasion of Banu Qaynuqa | 8,100 | ... that according to an Islamic tradition, the Invasion of Banu Qaynuqa was caused by a Jewish jeweler allegedly stripping a Muslim woman? | |
Battle of Breville | 8,100 | ... that on 12 June 1944, during the Battle of Breville, friendly fire killed the commander of the attacking force and wounded two British brigadiers? | |
Christine Jorgensen Reveals | 8,100 | ... that Christine Jorgensen Reveals is a docudrama about the first celebrity transsexual, who was called the world's most famous woman at the time? | |
Demolition of Dhul Khalasa | 7,800 | ... that even after Muhammad ordered the demolition of the pagan idol, Dhul Khalasa, it was resurrected and worshipped until 1815, when members of the Wahabbi movement demolished it with gunfire? | |
Tzeltal people | 7,700 | ... that the Tzeltal people (Tzeltal child pictured) of the Mexican state of Chiapas are descended from the Maya? | |
Quiet Birdmen | 7,700 | ... that the Quiet Birdmen were noisy? | |
Mini Hatch (2001–2006) | 7,400 | ... that as the full-sized clay mock-up of the original new Mini Hatch (pictured) was missing an exhaust pipe, chief designer Frank Stephenson, had to make one out of an empty beer can? | |
The Last Ringbearer | 7,400 | ... that The Last Ringbearer, an English translation of a Russian alternative retelling of Lord of the Rings, has been published as a non-commercial ebook after a 10-year delay due to fears of litigation? | |
Omura Shrine | 7,400 | ... that the object of worship at Omura Shrine is a sword? | |
Homo sapiens (novel) | 7,400 | ... that the late 19th-century novel Homo sapiens, although well received in Germany, was withdrawn from sale in the U.S. after being called obscene? | |
Sebuku (Borneo) | 7,300 | ... that environmentalists fear that the mine on Sebuku Island could sink it? | |
Supercomputing in Japan | 7,300 | ... that the world's fastest supercomputer, in Japan, costs $10 million a year to operate? | |
John Field, George B. Chadwick, Jack Owsley, George S. Stillman, James O. Rodgers, Joseph R. Swan, Charles D. Rafferty, William F. Knox, Art Howe | 1,172 + 1,632 + 1,271 + 451 + 318 + 340 + 689 + 365 + 1,009 = 7,247 | ... that despite winning seven national championships from 1899 to 1912, the Yale football team had 14 head coaches in those 14 years, including a lingerie manufacturer, "the phantom line cleaver", a manufacturer of machine guns, a victim of typhoid fever, a Harvard law student, the senior partner of Smith Barney & Co., the grandfather of a noted documentary filmmaker, the nephew of the U.S. Secretary of State, and the president of a historically black university? | |
Gottfried Schloemer | 7,200 | ... that Gottfried Schloemer (pictured with car) is considered by some to have built the first practical gasoline automobile in the United States? | |
Monarchism in Bavaria after 1918 | 7,000 | ... that, in 1933, when attempts were made to restore the monarchy in Bavaria to stall the Nazis' rise to power, Adolf Hitler warned the Bavarian government that this would lead to a "terrible catastrophe"? | |
Imperial Army of the Holy Roman Empire | 7,000 | ... that in 1681 the strength of the Imperial Army of the Holy Roman Empire (grenadier pictured) was fixed at 28,000 infantry and 12,000 cavalry? | |
Redstone Test Stand | 7,000 | ... that the Redstone Test Stand was built in Alabama by Wernher von Braun's rocketry team for just $25,000 out of concrete and salvaged materials? | |
Britannia Coco-nut Dancers | 6,900 | ... that the Britannia Coco-nut Dancers (pictured) bang their nuts together each Easter in Bacup? | |
The Cenotaph, Whitehall | 6,900 | ... that The Cenotaph, Whitehall (pictured) replaced a wood-and-plaster cenotaph erected in 1919 for the Allied Victory Parade? | |
Ramsdell Hall | 6,900 | ... that Ramsdell Hall in Cheshire, England, has been described by architectural writers as a "curious" and "appealingly quirky" house? | |
Castello Orsini-Odescalchi | 6,800 | ... that Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes married at the Castello Orsini-Odescalchi (pictured)? | |
Fighter-pilot school Lipetsk | 6,700 | ... that Germany, prohibited by the Treaty of Versailles from having an air force, operated the secret fighter-pilot school Lipetsk in the Soviet Union from 1926 to 1933? | |
Far Eastern Party | 6,700 | ... that Douglas Mawson was the sole survivor of the Far Eastern Party, enduring a month alone in the Antarctic and walking about 100 miles (160 km) to safety? | |
Classical compass winds | 6,500 | ... that today you only really need to remember four names (North, East, South, West) to get around, but ancient Greeks and Romans had to memorize 12 different wind names to orient themselves? | |
Yakovlev AIR-3 | 6,500 | ... that the Soviet Union's Yakovlev AIR-3 aircraft was designed by a student? | |
The Captive (painting) | 6,400 | ... that the man who bought Sterne's Captive (detail pictured) had John Raphael Smith's engraving plate broken after only 20 prints had been made? | |
Micronecta scholtzi | 6,400 | ... that the penis of the Lesser Water Boatman Micronecta scholtzi creates mating calls of 99.2 decibels, making it the loudest animal on earth, scaled for its size? | |
Tower of Jericho | 6,400 | ... that the shadow of nearby mountains first hit the Tower of Jericho on the sunset of the summer solstice and then spread across the entire proto-city in c. 8000 BCE? | |
Hraschina meteorite | 6,300 | ... that the fall of the Hraschina meteorite in 1751 was the first witnessed fall of an iron meteorite? | |
Plaza of the Seven Temples | 6,200 | ... that the main temple at the Plaza of the Seven Temples (pictured) in the Maya city of Tikal, in modern Guatemala, was decorated with a skull and crossbones? | |
Wicklow Way | 6,100 | ... that Ireland's Wicklow Way (pictured) was originally proposed by J. B. Malone in a series of articles in the Evening Herald newspaper? | |
Maupin Carbon Dragon | 6,100 | ... that the Maupin Carbon Dragon has a 44 ft (13 m) wingspan but weighs only 145 lb (66 kg)? | |
Russian ironclad Ne Tron Menia | 6,100 | ... that Russian broadside ironclad Ne Tron Menia was named after the biblical verse John 20:17? | |
Sugar Museum (Berlin) | 6,000 | ... that the Berlin Sugar Museum features a 1903 painting (pictured) of Franz Carl Achard presenting King Frederick William III of Prussia with a loaf of beet sugar? | |
The Captive King | 6,000 | ... that The Captive King is a lost painting by Joseph Wright of Derby that showed Guy de Lusignan taken prisoner, after the relics of the true cross were said to be lost? | |
Alex McDonald (prospector) | 6,000 | ... that the Big Moose from Antigonish was the "King of the Klondike? | |
Dr. John R. Drish House | 5,900 | ... that witnesses have reported ghostly lights and phantom fires emanating from the Dr. John R. Drish House in Tuscaloosa, Alabama? | |
Fokker FG-2 | 5,900 | ... that the Fokker FG-2 made the world's first passenger flight with a glider in 1922? | |
I Am a Camera (film) | 5,900 | ... that I Am a Camera is a 1955 British film that received an X certificate from the BBFC, but only after dialogue suggesting foot fetishism was removed? | |
195th (Airlanding) Field Ambulance | 5,700 | ... that during World War II, an officer from a British airborne forces unit recommended a German NCO for the Iron Cross? | |
Mietek Pemper | 5,700 | ... that Mietek Pemper, who was forced to work as Amon Göth's secretary, compiled and typed Oskar Schindler's famous list, which saved 1,200 Jewish prisoners from the Holocaust? | |
John ya Otto Nankudhu | 5,500 | ... that a pauper received a state burial in Namibia two days ago? | |
Fee-for-service Overutilization |
3,300+ 2,200= 5,500 |
... that the fee-for-service model encourages overutilization, which is a major factor behind the high cost of U.S. health care? | |
Feathers Hotel, Ludlow | 5,400 | ... that The New York Times referred to the Feathers Hotel (pictured) in Ludlow, Shropshire, as "the most handsome inn in the world"? | |
Tanguy Ngombo | 5,300 | ... that in the 2011 NBA Draft, reigning NBA champion Dallas Mavericks selected Qatari basketball player Tanguy Ngombo, even though his age and eligibility were disputed? | |
SS Clan Mackinnon (1945) | 5,200 | ... that the Empire Dunnet was built in 1945 then sold and renamed three times before wrecking in Borneo in 1967? | |
225th (Parachute) Field Ambulance | 5,200 | ... that the 225th (Parachute) Field Ambulance a British airborne forces unit, became responsible for the medical welfare of German U-boat crews? | |
Yak butter | 5,200 | ... that yak butter stays edible for up to a year and finds a new use after it gets old and rancid? | |
General Johnson Saving a Wounded French Officer from the Tomahawk of a North American Indian | 5,100 | ... that Benjamin West's painting of General Johnson Saving a Wounded French Officer from the Tomahawk of a North American Indian (pictured) contrasts against Sir William Johnson's "White Savage" reputation? | |
Great Mosque of al-Nuri (Mosul) | File:Al-Hadba.jpg | 5,100 | ... that the leaning minaret (pictured) of the Great Mosque of al-Nuri in Mosul, Iraq, reputedly gained its tilt after it bowed to the prophet Muhammad? |
Communist Party of French India | 5,100 | ... that in 1954 The New York Times warned that the Communist Party of French India was likely to seize power in the colony? | |
Church Cottage, Tutshill | 5,100 | ... that the writer of Harry Potter, J. K. Rowling, lived as a child at Church Cottage, Tutshill, a Grade II listed building constructed in about 1852 in the Victorian Gothic style? | |
Peter Voss | 5,050 | ... that SS-Oberscharführer Peter Voss was the first commander of the Auschwitz crematoria and gas chambers, buildings used to kill 900,000 people?? |
August 2011
[edit]Article | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
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Ernest R. Kouma | 30,200 | ... that US Army Master Sergeant Ernest R. Kouma was awarded the Medal of Honor (pictured) in the Korean War for singlehandedly killing approximately 250 North Korean troops? | |
Elephant of the Bastille | 26,200 | ... that a giant elephant (engraving pictured) in Paris was protected by a man living in one of its legs? | |
Muria people premarital sex |
18,700 + 2,800 = 21,500 | ... that although the Muria generally encourage premarital sex, some communities punish young people who take the same sexual partner for more than three nights? | |
Ratón | 19,300 | .... that a terrible Mouse weighing 500 kg (1,100 lb) has killed three people in Spain in the last five years? | |
Gun Hägglund | 17,100 | ... that Gun Hägglund (pictured) was Sweden's first female TV news presenter? | |
List of deaths at the Berlin Wall | 16,600 | ... that causes of the deaths at the Berlin Wall (examples of memorials pictured) included shooting, drowning, suffocation, suicide, and falling from a balloon? | |
Bertha Heyman | 14,400 | ... that the 19th-century swindler Bertha Heyman (pictured), known as "The Confidence Queen," conned men by pretending to be a wealthy woman who was unable to access her fortune? | |
Illusion of transparency | 14,300 | ... that simply knowing about and understanding the illusion of transparency might help reduce speech anxiety? | |
HMS Doterel (1880) | 14,200 | ... that on 26 April 1881 HMS Doterel (pictured) exploded, killing 143 of the 155 crew members? | |
Billy Waters | 13,800 | ... that Billy Waters (pictured), known for his peculiar antics, appeared in Tom and Jerry? | |
Great uncial codices | 13,300 | ... that only four great uncial codices have survived until the present day? | |
Battle of Merville Gun Battery | 13,300 | ... that despite being captured on D-Day, 6 June 1944 by British paratroops, the Merville Gun Battery remained in German hands until 17 August? | |
Paederus | 13,100 | ... that tiny Paederus beetles (pictured) may have caused some of the ten Plagues of Egypt? | |
Jan Mazurkiewicz | 12,400 | ... that after World War II, Polish resistance organizer and Warsaw Uprising fighter Jan Mazurkiewicz (pictured) was brutally tortured by the authorities in communist Poland? | |
Palaeontinidae | 12,100 | ... that fossils of extinct giant cicadas (pictured) were once misidentified as the oldest known butterflies? | |
Ophiura ophiura | 12,000 | ... that when the serpent star (pictured) is discarded with unwanted invertebrates from fishing nets, it rarely survives? | |
Niagara Whirlpool | 11,900 | ... that the Niagara Whirlpool (pictured) formed when the Niagara River intersected an ancient pre-glacial river gorge? | |
Ralph Delahaye Paine | 11,900 | ... that William Randolph Hearst dispatched a "damn fool" to deliver a gold and diamond encrusted sword to Cuban independence leader Máximo Gómez? | |
Emerita analoga | 11,500 | ... that although the Pacific sand crab can only crawl and burrow backwards (pictured), it can also tread water? | |
Born Again (The X-Files) | 11,200 | ... that The X-Files star David Duchovny "detested" the episode "Born Again", despite appearing alongside his then-girlfriend Maggie Wheeler? | |
Indian Head gold pieces | 10,600 | ... that the Indian Head gold pieces (quarter eagle pictured) are the only circulating U.S. coins to have a recessed design? | |
Bitar Mansion | 10,300 | ... that Bitar Mansion (pictured) is the most expensive home ever sold in Southeast Portland, Oregon? | |
Icelandic Phallological Museum | 10,200 | ... that the Icelandic Phallological Museum collection of penises includes 55 from whales but only one from Homo sapiens? | |
Heavy Neolithic | 10,100 | ... that Gigantolithic tools may predate agriculture? | |
If Day | 10,100 | ... that the only known report of bloodshed during the simulated Nazi invasion of Winnipeg was from a woman who cut her thumb while preparing toast? | |
Whorlton Castle | 10,000 | ... that Whorlton Castle (gatehouse pictured) in North Yorkshire is an unusual example of a Norman motte-and-bailey castle that continued to be used throughout the Middle Ages? | |
Adolf Theuer | 9,400 | ... that as a member of the Desinfektionskommando, one of Adolf Theuer's responsibilities was to insert the Zyklon B into the gas chamber at Auschwitz concentration camp? | |
Battle of Pakchon | 9,300 | ... that although the 3rd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment halted the advancing Chinese 117th Division during the Battle of Pakchon (fragment pictured), the commander was later relieved of his position? | |
Drynaria | 9,300 | ... that in Australia, basket ferns often contain amethystine pythons (pictured)? | |
Gisborough Priory | 9,300 | ... that Gisborough Priory (ruins pictured) was one of the last monastic houses in England to fall victim to the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1540? | |
HMS Phoenix (N96) | 9,300 | ... that HMS Phoenix (N96) (pictured) was the 18th Royal Navy warship to carry the name Phoenix? | |
Dacian bracelets | 9,200 | ... that Dacian bracelets (example pictured) were used as currency and votive offerings? | |
The Mermaid Inn | 8,600 | ... that the Mermaid Inn (pictured) in England has a strong connection with the notorious Hawkhurst Gang which used the inn in the 1740s? | |
Urmuz | 7,500+ 1,100= 8,600 |
... that the suicidal civil servant Urmuz (pictured) was depicted by posterity as Romania's first Dadaist? | |
Caulerpa racemosa | 8,600 | ... that, shortly before sunrise, mass spawning by sea grapes may create a green cloud? | |
Jay Bahadur | 8,500 | ... that journalist Jay Bahadur (pictured) lived with pirates in Somalia? | |
Twittering Machine | 8,500 | ... that Paul Klee’s Twittering Machine (pictured), now held by MOMA, was designated a work of degenerate art by the Nazi German government and sold for $120 in 1939? | |
Happy Salma 7 Hati 7 Cinta 7 Wanita |
6,600 + 1,900 = 8,500 | ... that Happy Salma, wife of a prince, agreed to play a prostitute in 7 Hearts 7 Loves 7 Women, but only if no men could touch her on set? | |
Smok (archosaur) | 8,500 | ... that a fossilized dragon has been found in Poland? | |
Portrait Diptych of Dürer's Parents | 7,900 | ... that the portraits of his parents (father's portrait pictured) that Albrecht Dürer painted when he was 19 are renowned for their depiction of the effects of ageing? | |
Prostitution in Indonesia | 6,800+ 1,100= 7,900 |
... that Indonesian prostitutes are sometimes marketed via Facebook? | |
Shearwater (schooner) | 7,700 | ... that the schooner Shearwater was hit by falling debris from the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001? | |
Oscar Clayton | 7,700 | ... that Oscar Clayton (caricature pictured) diagnosed the Prince of Wales's typhoid? | |
Timema | 7,800 | ... that some species of the stick insect genus Timema (example pictured) have not had sex for over a million years? | |
Herman Hollis | 7,500 | ... that FBI special agent Herman Hollis (pictured) was involved in the Bureau's shootouts with John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson and possibly Pretty Boy Floyd? | |
Virgin Islands dwarf sphaero | 7,500 | ... that a gecko from the British Virgin Islands called the Virgin Islands dwarf sphaero (pictured) is nearly as small as a U.S. dime and weighs at most 0.15 g (0.0053 oz)? | |
HMS Prince Charles (1930) | 7,500 | ... that Operation Archery was delayed by a full day because HMS Prince Charles was flooded with 14 feet (4.3 m) of seawater? | |
Scutellaria floridana | 7,500 | ... that the rare and threatened Florida skullcap does not bloom unless it burns at least every three years? | |
Coal ball | 7,400 | ... that coal balls are not made of coal? | |
Hwacheon Dam | 7,300 | ... that the 1 May 1951 U.S. Navy raid on the Hwacheon Dam during the Korean War was the last use of aerial torpedoes against a surface target? | |
The Naked Monster | 7,300 | ... that the 2005 science fiction and horror film spoof The Naked Monster took 21 years to make and was Kenneth Tobey's final film? | |
Edward A. Craig | 7,300 | ... that future US Marine Lieutenant General Edward A. Craig was arrested by Marines at age 10 for photographing the Washington Navy Yard? | |
Rifleman Khan | 7,000 | ... that the World War II military dog Rifleman Khan was awarded the Dickin Medal for bravery under heavy enemy fire? | |
Acacia falcata | 6,900 | ... that 98 species of bug have been recovered from sally? | |
Armed Forces Special Weapons Project | 6,900 | ... that the men of the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project took two weeks to assemble their first atomic bomb in December 1946? | |
Cuban Friendship Urn | 6,800 | ... that the Cuban Friendship Urn monument (pictured) originally stood in Havana, was moved to Washington, DC, in 1928, disappeared around 1959, and was found and re-erected in the 1990s? | |
224th (Parachute) Field Ambulance | 6,800 | ... that in Normandy on 7 June 1944, the surgeons of the 224th (Parachute) Field Ambulance kept on operating, despite being surrounded on three sides by German forces, the nearest being only 300 yards (270 m) away? | |
Emerentia | 6,800 | ... that Emerentia was reputed in the late 15th century to be the great-grandmother of Jesus? | |
Arab Indonesians | 6,500 | ... that the first Arab settlements in Indonesia (family pictured) may date from the fifth century? | |
Jim Eastwood | 6,500 | ... that Jim Eastwood became known as "Jedi Jim" because of his powers of persuasion on The Apprentice? | |
James E. Lawrence | 6,400 | ... that James E. Lawrence (pictured) was once "considered the greatest place-kicker the University of Michigan ever had"? | |
November 1828 | 6,300 | ... that November 1828 came in 1979? | |
Wicklow Mountains | 6,300 | ... that the Wicklow Mountains (pictured) are the largest area of continuous high ground in Ireland? | |
Biological screw joint | 6,300 | ... that scientists first discovered the biological screw joint in the Papuan weevil Trigonopterus oblongus? | |
Suicide on the London Underground | 6,300 | ... that drainage pits under London Underground tracks help reduce the number of suicides? | |
Central Saint Giles | 6,200 | ... that Central Saint Giles (pictured) in London, designed by architect Renzo Piano, has been compared to "giant mutant chewy sweets" and Marmite? | |
Rule of Marteloio | 6,200 | ... that Italian sailors in the Middle Ages used trigonometry and the rule of Marteloio (pictured) to navigate at sea? | |
Batara Kala | 6,200 | ... that, according to some legends, Batara Kala was conceived when a fish swallowed Shiva's sperm? | |
Battle of the Meander | 6,100 | ... that after the Battle of the Meander, a rumour spread amongst the crusaders that their successful counterattack had been led by an unknown white-clad knight? | |
David Holston | 6,000 | ... that David Holston scored over 2,000 points during his high school basketball career, yet was not offered a single college scholarship? | |
Earl Best | 6,000 | ... that the "Street Doctor", who delivers food to the poor of Newark, New Jersey in his van and seeks to end street violence, spent 10 years in solitary confinement? | |
Death in the Afternoon (cocktail) | 5,900 | ... that Death in the Afternoon, a cocktail containing absinthe and Champagne, was popularized by Ernest Hemingway in a 1935 recipe book? | |
Kuda Lumping | 5,900 | ... that the Flat Horse dance is said to represent male virility or female irrationality? | |
Telegraph Island | 5,900 | ... that the expression "going round the bend" is said to come from operators stationed on Telegraph Island who were desperate to escape to India by sailing round the bend in the Strait of Hormuz? | |
Henry Godwin (Army officer) | 5,700 | ... that Henry Godwin's capture of Rangoon in 1852 was completed by the storming of the Great Dagon Pagoda (pictured)? | |
Petrolisthes eriomerus | 5,700 | ... that a flattop crab, when trying to escape from a predator, can cast off limbs as a diversion, with the claws of a cast limb still gripping vigorously after separation? | |
Shibuya incident | 5,700 | ... that during the 1946 Shibuya incident over a thousand Yakuza fought hundreds of Formosan gang members for control of the local black markets in Tokyo? | |
Death of Alexander the Great | 5,700 | ... that after the death of Alexander the Great Achaemenid subjects shaved their heads? | |
Edward Fitzgerald (barrister) | 5,700 | ... that Edward Fitzgerald's clients have included public hate-figures such as Myra Hindley, Mary Bell, Maxine Carr, Jon Venables, various IRA prisoners and Abu Hamza? | |
Sean Stephenson | 5,600 | ... that because he has brittle bone disease, motivational speaker Sean Stephenson is just three feet (91 cm) tall? | |
Herculaneum papyri | 5,600 | ... that many pages of Herculaneum papyri carbonized by Mount Vesuvius in AD 79 were restored to legibility by multi-spectral imaging? | |
Steble Fountain | 5,500 | ... that when the Mayor of Liverpool turned on the Steble Fountain in 1879, its effect was said to have been "dismal"? | |
James Macnamara | 5,500 | ... that after killing a man in a duel over dogs, Captain James Macnamara asked naval officers including Viscounts Hood and Nelson, Lord Hotham, Sir Hyde Parker and Sir Thomas Troubridge, to testify on his behalf? | |
Ecological light pollution | 5,500 | ... that even when LED street lighting produces less light than conventional forms of lighting, it can still cause more ecological light pollution? | |
Kenneth R. Shadrick | 5,400 | ... that after Kenneth R. Shadrick became the first U.S. foot soldier reported killed in the Korean War, his father traced the tragedy back to a stolen football uniform? | |
Vanitas: Flesh Dress for an Albino Anorectic | 5,400 | ... that Jana Sterbak created a dress made of meat 23 years before Lady Gaga wore one? | |
Brownie Mary | 5,300 | ... that the arrest of Brownie Mary led to one of the first clinical trials studying the effects of cannabinoids in HIV-infected adults? | |
Fairey Stooge | 5,300 | ... that the Fairey Stooge was a surface-to-air missile powered by air-to-ground rockets? | |
Death of Mi Gao Huang Chen | 5,300 | ... that Mi Gao Huang Chen was beaten to death in 2005 by a large group of youths outside the Chinese takeaway he owned in Scholes, Greater Manchester? | |
Wat Tyler Cluverius, Jr. | 5,200 | ... that Wat Tyler Cluverius, Jr., who died in 1952, was the last surviving officer of the sinking of the USS Maine? | |
Monte Dolack | 5,200 | ... that sales of Montana artist Monte Dolack's poster, "Restoring the Wolf to Yellowstone," were banned in Yellowstone and Glacier national parks by the U.S. National Park Service in 1990? | |
Wildlife of South Sudan | 5,200 | ... that South Sudan could be the location of "the biggest migration of large mammals on Earth"? | |
Bone Regency | 5,200 | ... that shrimp, seaweed, and milkfish are found in Bone? | |
Express Yourself (Madonna song) | 5,100 | ... that the music video of the song "Express Yourself" had a budget of $5 million, making it the most expensive music video at the time of its release? |
September 2011
[edit]- Note: "Views / hour" = "DYK views" divided by the number of hours on the Main page (6, 8 or 12)
Article | Image | DYK views | Views / hour | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|---|
John's Phone | 25,500 | 2,125 | ... that John's Phone has been dubbed "the world's simplest phone"? | |
Doctor Willard Bliss | 18,000 | 1,500 | ... that after being shot in 1881, U.S. President Garfield was treated by Doctor Doctor Bliss (pictured)? | |
Lighthouse and naval vessel urban legend | 17,200 | 1,433 | ... that the Military Officers Association of America reports that the "I'm a lighthouse. Your call" urban legend is forwarded to the organization an average of three times a day? | |
List of Chinese cultural relics forbidden to be exhibited abroad | 16,200 | 2,025 | ... that the Chinese government has published a list of sixty-four important cultural relics (one of them pictured) that are forbidden to be exhibited outside of China? | |
Extermination of Evil | 15,000 | 1,250 | ... that a divine silkworm moth (pictured) is one of those participating in the Extermination of Evil? | |
Araneus mitificus | 14,300 | 1,191 | ... that the kidney garden spider (pictured) builds webs that are missing one segment? | |
Bob Beckwith | 13,600 | 1,700 | ... that Bob Beckwith, the firefighter accompanying President George W. Bush at Ground Zero (pictured), had been retired for 7 years and bluffed his way into the rescue site using old gear? | |
Bigfin reef squid | 13,100 | 1,091 | ... that bigfin reef squids (pictured) have one of the fastest recorded growth rates of any large marine invertebrate? | |
Coelopleurus exquisitus | 12,300 | 1,025 | ... that a listing on eBay led to the discovery of a new species? | |
Albertine (1886 novel) Albertine i politilægens venteværelse |
8,100+ 3,900= 12,000 |
1,000 | ... that the 1886 novel Albertine (painting of a scene shown) expedited the abolition of public prostitution in Norway? | |
Coles 4038 | 11,900 | 991 | ... that the Coles 4038 microphone, used on records by The Beatles and Led Zeppelin, has the appearance of a waffle iron? | |
Jane Dieulafoy | 11,600 | 1,450 | ... that Jane Dieulafoy (pictured) received special permission from the French government to wear men's clothing in public? | |
Empress Shōshi | 11,600 | 1,450 | ... that as a 12-year-old, Empress Shōshi (artistic depiction pictured) was sent by her father Fujiwara no Michinaga to live in Emperor Ichijō's harem? | |
Prussian Homage (painting) | 11,400 | 1,425 | ... that Prussian Homage (fragment pictured) by Jan Matejko was among the most wanted Polish paintings searched for by Nazis during World War II? | |
White House Honey Ale | 11,100 | 925 | ... that White House Honey Ale is the only beer known to have been brewed in the White House? | |
Statue of Winston Churchill, Parliament Square | 10,800 | 900 | ... that there were concerns that the statue of Winston Churchill in Parliament Square looked too much like Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini? | |
Mule scavenger | 10,400 | 1,300 | ... that many children have been injured or died while sweeping up cotton? | |
Project A119 | 10,200 | 1,275 | ... that Carl Sagan worked with the US Air Force on detonating a nuclear device on the Moon? | |
Olympic medal | 10,100 | 1,262 | ... that Olympic gold medals (example pictured) have been made out of silver, jade, and glass? | |
The Problem We All Live With | 10,100 | 1,262 | ... that Norman Rockwell's The Problem We All Live With could not be displayed in a public area of the White House because of the racial slur painted behind Ruby Bridges? | |
To Whom It May Concern: Ka Shen's Journey | 9,700 | 808 | ... that the documentary To Whom It May Concern (poster pictured) tells the story of Nancy Kwan, one of the first Asian leads in a Hollywood film? | |
Songs in the Key of X: Music from and Inspired by the X-Files | 9,500 | 791 | ... that Alice Cooper and Rob Zombie were nominated for a Grammy award for a song in the key of X? | |
Man and Woman in Front of a Pile of Excrement | 9,400 | 1,175 | ... that Miró named a painting Man and Woman in Front of a Pile of Excrement because of something Rembrandt said? | |
Laccognathus embryi | 9,300 | 1,162 | ... that the extinct lobe-finned fish Laccognathus embryi (reconstruction pictured) had fangs up to 3.8 cm (1.5 in) long? | |
Princess Sophia of the United Kingdom | 9,200 | 1,150 | ... that Princess Sophia (pictured), the fifth daughter of King George III, once remarked her life was so "deadly dull" that she wished she were a kangaroo? | |
Leech collector | 9,100 | 1,137 | ... that renowned poet William Wordsworth was inspired by a leech collector (leech pictured)? | |
Tadeusz Rejtan | 9,000 | 1,125 | ... that Tadeusz Rejtan is remembered in Poland for his dramatic gesture (pictured) as a symbol of patriotism? | |
5th Parachute Brigade (United Kingdom) | 9,000 | 750 | ... that in 1945 a Japanese battalion was rearmed to serve alongside the British 5th Parachute Brigade in the Far East? | |
Single molecule electric motor | 8,800 | 1,100 | ... that the world's smallest electric motor is made up of a single molecule and can be driven at up to one million revolutions per second? | |
Women in Peru | 8,700 | 1,087 | ... that Peruvian women (example pictured) may marry at age 16, but the age of consent is 18? | |
Luidia ciliaris | 8,700 | 1,087 | ... that the seven armed starfish (pictured) can "walk" and does not have an anus? | |
Norman Kamaru | 8,500 | 708 | ... that Norman Kamaru went from being a police officer to "billionaire" singer in less than six months? | |
Turkish Slave | 8,300 | 691 | ... that the common name of the 1533 Parmigianino painting Turkish Slave (pictured) is due to confusion of the typical headgear of noblewomen of the time with a turban? | |
Battle of Clervaux | 7,900 | 987 | ... that the Battle of Clervaux, part of the Battle of the Bulge, has been compared to the Alamo? | |
Admiral Ackbar | 7,800 | 975 | ... that puppeteer Timothy M. Rose asked to portray Return of the Jedi's Admiral Ackbar solely based on the character's looks? | |
Solomon (Byzantine general) | 7,800 | 975 | ... that Solomon was accidentally castrated as an infant? | |
The Secret of the Nagas | 7,700 | 962 | ... that The Secret of the Nagas was in such high demand before its release that 80,000 copies of the book were pre-ordered? | |
Printed solar panel | 7,500 | 937 | ... that printed solar panels can be printed on ordinary untreated paper at a cost similar to that of inkjet printing? | |
Harry Lee (cricketer) | 7,400 | 616 | ... that Harry Lee played his only Test cricket match over 15 years after being declared dead? | |
Michael Douglas (skeleton racer) | 7,300 | 912 | ... that Michael Douglas competed for Canada in the Winter Olympics? | |
Statue of King Charles I, London | 7,200 | 900 | ... that after the English Civil War, a statue of King Charles I was hidden by a metalsmith whilst he sold cutlery that he claimed was made from its melted-down metal? | |
Numbers (software) | 7,100 | 887 | ... that Apple Inc.'s Numbers has been called a page layout and presentation program disguised as a spreadsheet? | |
Argentina in World War II | 7,100 | 887 | ... that Argentina stayed neutral during most of World War II, and declared war on the Axis powers on March 27, 1945? | |
Mårup Church | 7,000 | 875 | ... that the 13th-century Mårup Church (pictured) was partially dismantled in 2008 to prevent it from falling into the North Sea? | |
Brizlee Tower | 6,800 | 850 | ... that the elaborately Gothick Grade 1 listed Brizlee Tower (pictured) was built by the third 1st Duke of Northumberland who declared "they are my orders, it is my planning"? | |
Hiallt | 6,700 | 558 | ... that Hiallt was a Viking warrior who settled in Normandy and whose descendants, the Hauteville family, became rulers of Sicily and were leaders in the First Crusade? | |
Waffle House Index | 6,600 | 825 | ... that FEMA determines the impact of a storm based on the service at Waffle House? | |
Yossele the Holy Miser | 6,500 | 812 | ... that the Jewish folktale of Yossele the Holy Miser (tombstone pictured) speaks to one of the highest forms of charity in the Jewish tradition – giving anonymously? | |
Mammy's Cupboard | 6,500 | 812 | ... that the Mississippi restaurant Mammy's Cupboard, built in the shape of a woman, has been said to resemble Aunt Jemima? | |
Rhinoceroses in ancient China | 6,500 | 541 | ... that rhinoceroses in ancient China were used as models for wine vessels? | |
James Underdown | 6,400 | 800 | ... that James Underdown (pictured), an investigator of fringe science claims, once declared himself Poet Laureate of Calumet City, Illinois, and toured Midwest comedy clubs under the name Jim U-boat? | |
Phantom ride | 6,300 | 787 | ... that phantom rides were often filmed by a cameraman tied to the front of a speeding train? | |
Siege of Chester | 6,300 | 525 | ... that during the Siege of Chester, King Charles I watched the Battle of Rowton Heath from the Phoenix Tower (pictured) on the city's walls? | |
The Bouncy | 6,200 | 775 | ... that there were concerns that The Bouncy could derail a train? | |
Trump National Golf Club (Los Angeles) | 6.113 | 509 | ... that at a total cost of US$264 million, the Trump National Golf Club in Los Angeles is the most expensive golf course ever constructed? | |
Valemax | 6,100 | 762 | ... that the 400,000-ton Valemax ships are the largest bulk carriers ever built? | |
Perpetual Diet of Regensburg | 6,000 | 500 | ... that the Eternal Diet, "a bladeless knife without a handle", followed the Youngest Recess of the Holy Roman Empire? | |
Cosmo (dog) | 6,000 | 500 | ... that Ewan McGregor was inspired to buy his own pet dog after working with canine actor Cosmo? | |
HB Jassin | 5,900 | 737 | ... that a Muslim "pope" translated the Quran after being tried for blasphemy? | |
Lisa Tuttle | 5,900 | 737 | ... that science fiction author Lisa Tuttle is the only person to have refused a Nebula Award? | |
Kepler-16b | 5,900 (7,300- (2,200+651)/2) |
737 | ... that astronomers have discovered a real-life "Tatooine"? | |
Paustian House | 5,900 | 491 | ... that the inspiration for the Paustian House (pictured) in Copenhagen came to architect Jørn Utzon while he was walking through a forest of beech trees? | |
Lomatia silaifolia | 5,900 | 491 | ... that the cut flowers of the crinkle bush can attract and kill flies when kept indoors? | |
Potato Valley Cafe | 5,800 | 725 | ... that the owners of Potato Valley Cafe, located in Annapolis, Maryland, are not worried about competition because no other restaurant serves only potatoes? | |
Northern tamandua | 5,800 | 483 | ... that the northern tamandua eats up to nine thousand ants and termites per day? | |
Trolleybuses in Shanghai Trolleybuses in Philadelphia |
3,200+ 2,500= 5,700 |
712 | ... that of more than 300 trolleybus systems currently serving cities worldwide, the 1914-opened trolleybus system in Shanghai is the oldest, and its counterpart in Philadelphia (pictured) the second-oldest? | |
Matangi | 5,700 | 712 | ... that the taboo offering of a cloth stained with menstrual blood to the Hindu goddess Matangi (pictured) is thought to grant the ability to attract a mate? | |
Closed circle of suspects | 5,500 | 458 | ... that the closed circle of suspects is a common literary device from the Golden Age of Detective Fiction? | |
Elli Hatschek | 5,500 | 687 | ... that Elli Hatschek, her husband Paul, and his daughter, Krista Lavíčková, were all executed by the Nazis within seven months of each other? | |
Dolores Alexander | 5,400 | 675 | ... that, in 1972, lesbian feminist Dolores Alexander opened "Mother Courage", the first feminist restaurant in the United States? | |
Haines Shoe House | 5,400 | 675 | ... that Haines Shoe House (pictured) is right by a shoe-shaped doghouse on Shoe House Road? | |
Fredensborg Houses | 5,400 | 450 | ... that the Fredensborg Houses were specifically designed by Jørn Utzon for Danes returning from abroad? | |
Yangshan Quarry | 5,300 | 662 | ... that the giant stele (section pictured) with which the Yongle Emperor meant to honor his father, never left the quarry? | |
Eris (simulation) | 5,300 | 662 | ... that Eris is the first successful detailed simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy? | |
Coventry Cross (monument) | 5,200 | 650 | ... that after its 1688 re-gilding, the Coventry Cross (replica pictured) was so bright that people could hardly bear to look directly at it on a sunny day? | |
The Rise of the Blue Beetle! | 5,200 | 650 | ... that a review of "The Rise of the Blue Beetle!" said that it is not for people who dislike "wormholes, single-cell organisms and evil intergalactic pirates being mentioned in the same breath as Batman"? | |
Peter's vision of a sheet with animals | 5,100 | 637 | ... that in Peter's vision of a sheet with animals (pictured), Peter's triple refusal to eat is thought to echo his triple denial of Jesus? | |
Monument to the Women of World War II | 5,100 | 637 | ... that a former Speaker of the House of Commons raised money for the Monument to the Women of World War II (pictured) by appearing on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? | |
Aintree Institute | 5,100 | 637 | ... that Brian Epstein was so angered that The Beatles were paid in loose change for a gig at the Aintree Institute, he never booked with the venue's promoter again? | |
Archaic Greek alphabets | 5,100 | 425 | ... that in some archaic Greek alphabets (Corinthian inscription pictured), an Ε could look like a Β, a Β like a C, a Γ like an Ι, an Ι like a Σ, or a Σ like an Μ? |
October 2011
[edit]- Note: "Views / hour" = "DYK views" divided by the number of hours on the Main page (6, 8 or 12)
Article | Image | DYK views | Views / hour | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eternal Silence (sculpture) | 71,800 | 5,983 | ... that according to folklore, people looking into the eyes of Eternal Silence (pictured) will see a vision of their own death? | |
Harry Powers | 25,500 | 2,125 | ... that Harry Powers said that watching his victims die was more fun than a brothel? | |
Hammersmith Ghost | 24,300 | 2,025 | ... that the case of the Hammersmith Ghost (pictured) was tried at the Old Bailey and the accused was sentenced to death by hanging and dissection? | |
Angel Island mouse | 22,400 | 1,866 | ... that the entire population of Angel Island mice on the island of Estanque in the Gulf of California may have been killed by a single domestic cat in a period of just two years? | |
Fowler's Ghost | 22,400 | 1,866 | ... that Fowler's Ghost was first seen on the London Metropolitan Railway in 1861, nearly exploded and was never seen again after 1895? | |
Sandra Dewi Quickie Express |
12,200+ 9,200= 21,400 |
1,783 | ... that Sandra Dewi gave an "arousing" performance in Quickie Express, but has refused to do "vulgar" photo shoots? | |
John C. Colt | 21,000 | 1,750 | ... that the unusual way that John C. Colt disposed of his murder victim's corpse may have influenced Edgar Allen Poe's story "The Oblong Box"? | |
Island of Lost Men | 20,000 | 1,666 | ... that Guns for China became the Island of Lost Men (key player pictured)? | |
Naked Woman Climbing a Staircase | 15,000 | 1,250 | ... that the effort put forth by the subject of Miró's 1937 Naked woman climbing a staircase and her heavy limbs are thought to reflect the tragedy of the Spanish Civil War? | |
Tim Burke (wrestler) | 14,500 | 1,208 | ... that Lucifer died in 2011? | |
Aquaculture of cobia | 14,300 | 1,191 | ... that the aquaculture of cobia, a large warm water fish (pictured), has high potential because of its rapid growth and good flesh quality? | |
Anna Essinger | 13,900 | 1,158 | ... that educator Anna Essinger, ordered to fly the swastika on Hitler's birthday, planned a day-long outing for her school, leaving the flag to fly over an empty building? | |
Tupolev Tu-142 | 13,700 | 1,141 | ... that the Soviet Tupolev Tu-142 (pictured) maritime patrol aircraft was developed in response to the American UGM-27 Polaris submarine-launched ballistic missile? | |
Day of Seven Billion | 11,800+ 1,500= 13,300 | 1,108 | ... that the United Nations Population Fund has designated today as the Day of Seven Billion? | |
Mount Everest webcam | 13,300 | 1,108 | ... that the world's highest webcam is capable of streaming live HD video of the summit of Mount Everest? | |
Edison Ore-Milling Company | 13,100 | 1,091 | ... that Thomas Edison lost a fortune in his ore-milling company (building pictured) but "had a hell of a good time spending it"? | |
HMS Temeraire (1798) | 12,900 | 1,075 | ... that J. M. W. Turner's painting of HMS Temeraire (pictured) has been voted Britain's favourite painting? | |
Shite-hawk | 12,700 | 1,058 | ... that, contrary to claims of a medieval origin for the term shite-hawk, it originated as British military slang for the Black Kite (pictured)? | |
Royal Ghost Frog | 12,700 | 1,058 | ... that Ghost Frogs roam the streams of South Africa? | |
Marrus orthocanna | 12,600 | 1,050 | ... that Marrus orthocanna (pictured) is a colonial animal composed of smaller animals arranged on a stem? | |
Pythagorean tiling | 12,600 | 1,050 | ... that the Pythagorean tiling, a pattern of squares of two sizes that can be used to prove the Pythagorean theorem, appears in a painting (pictured) by Dutch Golden Age artist Jacob Ochtervelt? | |
Forever Marilyn | 12,400 | 1,033 | ... that the reaction of the public to a 26-foot-tall statue of Marilyn Monroe has been criticized as "juvenile"? | |
Piazza Bra | 11,700 | 975 | ... that Pink Floyd, Rod Stewart, and Maria Callas have all performed in Verona's Bra? | |
Philip A. Payton, Jr. | 11,400 | 950 | ... that Philip A. Payton, Jr. (pictured), called the "Father of Harlem", would evict white tenants and replace them with black ones? | |
Aquaculture of sea cucumbers | 11,200 | 933 | ... that in China, the aquaculture of sea cucumbers (sea cucumber pictured) takes place together with the aquaculture of prawns, so the sea cucumbers can feed on the waste from the prawns? | |
McCaull Comic Opera Company May Yohé |
728+ 10,300= 11,028 |
919 | ... that American McCaull Comic Opera Company actress May Yohé (pictured), once the owner of the Hope Diamond, died poor? | |
Dewi Sandra | 10,700 | 892 | ... that in 2004 Dewi Sandra was selected as one of the sexiest women in the world by FHM? | |
Kimi ni Todoke (film) | 10,000 | 833 | ... that female viewers of the film Kimi ni Todoke on its opening weekend outnumbered male viewers by a ratio of more than seven to one? | |
Ahmad Nady | 9,900 | 825 | ... that Egyptian political cartoonist Ahmad Nady (pictured) took part in the 2011 Egyptian revolution, drawing cartoons while he demonstrated? | |
Lost River sucker | 9,800 | 816 | ... that "gill rot" in the Lost River sucker (pictured) may be associated with ammonia contamination? | |
Chapel of Russia's Resurrection | 9,800 | 816 | ... that a Russian sect believes that Vladimir Putin is the reincarnation of Saint Paul? | |
Dronningegården | 9,754 | 813 | ... that the design of the Dronningegården residential complex in Copenhagen was shaped by the shortage of materials during World War II? | |
Garin Nugroho | 8,900 | 742 | ... that award-winning director Garin Nugroho (pictured) liked to bathe in volcanic runoff as a child? | |
Owens pupfish | 8,300 | 691 | ... that the entire global population of the Owens pupfish was once contained in two buckets? | |
John Titus (jurist) | 8,200 | 683 | ... that despite witnessing the event from the bench, Arizona Territorial Chief Justice John Titus declined to bring charges against a prosecutor who tried to kill a criminal defendant in open court? | |
Spongiforma | 8,000 | 666 | ... that the most recently described member of the fungal genus Spongiforma (pictured) is named after the cartoon character SpongeBob SquarePants? | |
David Hoberman | 7,800 | 650 | ... that in his early life, David Hoberman couldn't walk on cracks, and had to touch poles? | |
Kasper Twardowski | 7,800 | 650 | ... that Kasper Twardowski's 1617 erotica, banned by the Bishop of Kraków, was rejected by the poet himself as immoral? | |
Israelite Tower | 7,700 | 641 | ... that finds unearthed at the Israelite Tower in Jerusalem's Jewish Quarter attest to the Babylonian sack of the city in 586 BCE? | |
Port of Split | 7,500 | 625 | ... that the Port of Split (pictured) in Croatia is the third largest passenger seaport in the Mediterranean? | |
Acha Septriasa Irwansyah Love Story (2011 film) Hanny Saputra Zaskia Sungkar |
2,300 + 1,400 + 2,100 + 480 + 1,200 = 7,480 | 623 | ... that former couple Acha Septriasa and Irwansyah united for their last Love Story under the supervision of Irwansyah's future wife and direction of Hanny Saputra? | |
A Mind of Its Own: A Cultural History of the Penis | 7,200 | 600 | ... that David M. Friedman's book A Mind of Its Own: A Cultural History of the Penis was described as "embarrassingly europhallocentric"? | |
Galilee Squadron | 7,200 | 600 | ... that during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Israel's Galilee Squadron was menaced by Syrian trainer aircraft? | |
IRAS 17163-3907 | 7,100 | 591 | ... that the star IRAS 17163-3907, the closest yellow hypergiant ever found, is said to resemble a fried egg? | |
Henri Ford | 6,800 | 567 | ... that Henri Ford performed brain surgery with CNN correspondent Sanjay Gupta on a victim of the 2010 Haiti earthquake aboard the USS Carl Vinson? | |
Empetrichthys latos | 6,700 | 558 | ... that the male Pahrump killifish turns blue during spawning? | |
Dewi Persik | 6,600 | 550 | ... that twice-married Indonesian singer Dewi Persik announced earlier this year that she had officially become a virgin again following a pilgrimage to Mecca? | |
X (The X-Files) | 6,400 | 533 | ... that in 2009 Entertainment Weekly listed X as one of 20 "black sci-fi icons"? | |
Sint Servaasbrug | 6,400 | 533 | ... that the Sint Servaasbrug in Maastricht has been called the oldest bridge in the Netherlands, and was built in the 13th century to replace a Roman bridge that gave its name to the city? | |
Fairyfly | 6,300 | 525 | ... that fairyflies include the smallest known insects, smaller than a single-celled Paramecium? | |
List of posthumous number ones on the UK Albums Chart | 6,200 | 516 | ... that Michael Jackson, Elvis Presley, and Amy Winehouse (pictured) have all had posthumous number-one albums in the UK? | |
Nicholas Estavillo | 6,200 | 516 | ... that Puerto Rican American policeman Nicholas Estavillo (pictured) was the first Hispanic to become a three-star Chief in the NYPD? | |
Jubilee Library, Brighton | 6,100 | 508 | ... that so many people used Brighton's Jubilee Library (pictured) on its opening day that the toilets stopped flushing? | |
Myanmymar | 5,900 | 491 | ... that the Albian 100-million-year-old fossil wasp Myanmymar (pictured) is only half a millimetre long? | |
Maroon Creek Bridge | 5,800 | 483 | ... that the Maroon Creek Bridge (pictured) is the only significant remnant of two rail lines that once served Aspen, Colorado? | |
Pillnitz Castle | 5,700 | 475 | ... that one of the oldest camellia trees in Europe was planted in the garden of Pillnitz Castle (pictured) in 1801? | |
Spigelia genuflexa | 5,700 | 475 | ... that the plant Spigelia genuflexa bends down to bury its own seeds? | |
Geomagnetic pole | 5,700 | 475 | ... that the North geomagnetic pole is not the same as the magnetic North Pole, and that a compass points at neither? | |
Linckia multifora | 5,616 | 468 | ... that the spotted Linckia (pictured) frequently reproduces by self amputating an arm, which then grows into a new individual? | |
Guizhou Soar Eagle | 5,500 | 458 | ... that a new Chinese unmanned aerial vehicle could be used for relaying targeting information for ballistic and cruise missiles to destroy enemy ships? | |
King House (Mayport, Florida) | 5,500 | 458 | ... that the purportedly haunted King House is now home to feral cats? | |
Robert Frascino | 5,500 | 458 | ... that immunologist and AIDS advocate Robert Frascino considered himself privileged after being infected with HIV? | |
Temple of Artemis (Corfu) | 5,216 | 434 | ... that the function of the Gorgon and panther reliefs (Gorgon pictured) on the pediment of the Temple of Artemis in Corfu is believed to be apotropaic? | |
Prior Park | 5,200 | 433 | ... that Ralph Allen built Prior Park (pictured) of Bath Stone to advertise its qualities as a building material? | |
Hylarana aurantiaca | 5,200 | 433 | ... that golden frogs are often mistaken for bronzed frogs? | |
Australian contribution to the Battle of Normandy | 5,200 | 433 | ... that the Australian contribution to the Battle of Normandy in 1944 included ten Royal Australian Air Force squadrons and hundreds of personnel posted to Royal Air Force units and Royal Navy warships? | |
Under the Tree (film) | 5,200 | 433 | ... that the brown-tinted and shaky camerawork of Under the Tree was considered "sometimes near-nauseating"? | |
Lexicon Branding | 5,200 | 433 | ... that Lexicon Branding created the brand names Pentium, BlackBerry, PowerBook, Swiffer, OnStar, Subaru Outback and Forester, Toyota Scion, Dasani, and Embassy Suites Hotels? | |
Armed Boats Squadron Dubrovnik | 5,100 | 425 | ... that the Armed Boats Squadron Dubrovnik provided a resupply route to the city of Dubrovnik during its 1991–1992 siege? |
November 2011
[edit]- Note: "Views / hour" = "DYK views" divided by the number of hours on the Main page (6, 8 or 12)
Article | Image | DYK views | Views / hour | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|---|
Japanese aircraft carrier Amagi | 27,100 | 2,258 | ... that the Japanese aircraft carrier Amagi (wreck pictured) capsized on 29 July 1945 as a result of cumulative damage inflicted by American airstrikes on 24 and 28 July? | |
Yogo sapphire | 25,100 | 3,137 | ...that Yogo sapphires (pictured) are rarer than diamonds and are found only in Yogo Gulch, Montana? | |
Scandinavian Scotland | 21,700 | 1,808 | ... that Scandinavian influence in Scotland, still evident today (pictured), was probably at its height during the time of Thorfinn the Mighty? | |
Android lawn statues | 20,400 | 1,700 | ... that Google keeps giant dessert items on its lawn? | |
Scar boat burial | 20,400 | 1,700 | ... that despite being located in the Orkney Islands, the sand lining of the Scar boat burial (plaque from site pictured) matches no known Scottish sand? | |
George Spencer (New Haven) | 19,700 | 1,641 | ... that a stillborn, deformed piglet's resemblance to George Spencer led to him becoming the first white man executed in Connecticut? | |
Hexagonal water | 18,400 | 1,533 | ... that hexagonal water, a configuration of water that supposedly stops aging, is a marketing scam? | |
Frederick Carl Frieseke | 17,500 | 2,188 | ... that American painter Frederick Carl Frieseke said he got "much pleasure in shocking the good Church people with the nudes" (example pictured)? | |
Feather tights | 15,400 | 1,283 | ... that in medieval art, angels were often depicted wearing feather tights (pictured)? | |
The Bugaboos | 13,400 | 1,675 | ... that the Bugaboos (pictured) were apparently named by disgruntled prospectors? | |
Toilet god | 13,000 | 1,083 | ... that those who believe in toilet gods hold that they can be appeased by praying, eating or offering rice, clearing one's throat, or biting the toilet? | |
Gerry Hewson | 12,800 | 1,066 | ... that a nude picture of 1996 Summer Paralympics gold medallist Gerry Hewson and his pregnant wife was published by Time Out New York? | |
Mereka Bilang, Saya Monyet! | 12,200 | 871 | ... that They Say I'm a Monkey! used leeches feeding to symbolize the rape of a child? | |
Corculum cardissa | 12,100 | 1,008 | ... that the heart cockle (pictured) is named after the shape of its bivalve shell? | |
Bassetki statue | 12,100 | 1,008 | ... that, after the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Bassetki statue, which is more than 4,200 years old, was found in a cesspool? | |
Morphsuits | 11,600 | 966 | ... that all employment for Morphsuits spandex bodysuits is outsourced except for three positions? | |
Brighton Wheel | 11,400 | 950 | ... that the Brighton Wheel (pictured) in Brighton, England, stood in South Africa last year? | |
The End: Hitler's Germany 1944–45 | 11,400 | 1,425 | ... that 49% of German military losses happened in the last 10 months of the Second World War in Europe? | |
Florya Atatürk Marine Mansion | 11,300 | 941 | ... that the Florya Atatürk Marine Mansion (pictured), built in 1935 as a summer residence for Turkish president Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, is on the sea about 70 m (230 ft) offshore? | |
Lon Myers | 11,100 | 925 | ... that runner Lon Myers (pictured), who set 11 world records, won one race with only one shoe, and another while running sideways? | |
Bud Weiser | 11,100 | 925 | ... that Bud Weiser was a Major League Baseball player? | |
Joshua L. Goldberg | 10,800 | 900 | ... that Joshua L. Goldberg (pictured), the first rabbi to serve as a World War II U.S. navy chaplain, was a Russian army deserter? | |
Wilson desk | 10,700 | 891 | ... that Richard Nixon chose the Wilson desk as his Oval Office desk because he believed it was used by Woodrow Wilson, but it was actually used by Henry Wilson, Vice President under Ulysses S. Grant? | |
Obedient Wives Club | 10,500 | 1,312 | ... that the Obedient Wives Club is the publisher of a book called Islamic Sex, Fighting Against Jews To Return Islamic Sex To The World? | |
Devil's Humps, Stoughton | 10,400 | 1,300 | ... that, according to Sussex folklore, the Bronze Age barrows known as the Devil's Humps (pictured) were raised over the bodies of defeated Viking marauders? | |
Death of Wang Yue | 10,300 | 858 | ... that the hit-and-run death of a two-year-old girl has led to a possible "Good Samaritan" law in China? | |
Bredon Hill Hoard | 10,300 | 858 | ... that some of the nominally silver Roman coins from the Bredon Hill Hoard (pictured) only have a 1% silver content? | |
Grand Prix of America Port Imperial Street Circuit 2013 Formula One season |
5,200+ 3,400+ 1,500= 10,100 |
1,262 | ... that veteran NASCAR promoter Humpy Wheeler is an advisor to the Grand Prix of America, a Formula One race to be run in New Jersey (planned track layout pictured) starting in 2013? | |
Culture in music cognition | 10,100 | 841 | ... that the music a person hears in childhood may affect that person's musical cognition as an adult? | |
Port an Eilean Mhòir ship burial | 10,000 | 833 | ... that the Port an Eilean Mhòir ship burial (pictured), excavated in 2011, is the first confirmed Viking ship burial to be discovered in mainland Scotland since 1935? | |
SMS Kaiserin Augusta | 9,900 | 1,237 | ... that during the Spanish–American War, German admiral Otto von Diederichs was ordered to attempt the acquisition of colonial concessions in the Philippines, using SMS Kaiserin Augusta (pictured) as his flagship? | |
Order of the Occult Hand | 9,900 | 1,240 | ... that a media conspiracy calling itself the Order of the Occult Hand has infiltrated The Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, and The Washington Times? | |
Poppy factory | 9,700 | 808 | ... that two poppy factories in England and Scotland produce approximately 41 million remembrance poppies (English example pictured) each year between them? | |
Tupolev ANT-41 | 9,700 | 1,212 | ... that the Tupolev ANT-41 torpedo bomber was designed to be flown either with conventional landing gear or as a floatplane? | |
Stauroteuthis syrtensis | 9,500 | 791 | ... that the octopus Stauroteuthis syrtensis (pictured) glows but nobody knows for what purpose? | |
Course Setting Bomb Sight | 9,500 | 791 | ... that its ability to solve wind drift calculations made the Course Setting Bomb Sight the "most important bombsight" of World War I? | |
SMS Breslau | 9,300 | 1,162 | ... that on the first day of World War I, the German light cruiser SMS Breslau (pictured) bombarded the port of Bône in French North Africa? | |
New Scotland Avenue (Troop B) Armory | 8,700 | 725 | ... that the New Scotland Avenue Armory (pictured) in Albany is one of only six in the state of New York designed for use by a cavalry unit? | |
Scott Viking 1 | 8,600 | 1,075 | ... that at least two of the four Scott Viking 1 gliders built were impressed into Royal Air Force service during World War Two? | |
Independence, Pitkin County, Colorado | 8,600 | 716 | ... that the last residents of Independence, Colorado (remaining buildings pictured), billed their midwinter evacuation to nearby Aspen as a ski club race with an entry fee of one ham sandwich? | |
Marine isotope stage | 8,500 | 1,062 | ... that there have been only 22 marine isotope stages in the last million years? | |
RPS Rajah Soliman (D-66) | 8,000 | 1,000 | ... that RPS Rajah Soliman (pictured) was sunk by a typhoon with two names? | |
Dovedale by Moonlight | 7,900 | 658 | ... that Joseph Wright of Derby had only seen the scene once at night before he painted Dovedale by Moonlight (pictured)? | |
Bellavista housing estate | 7,400 | 616 | ... that in the Bellavista housing estate (pictured), designed by Arne Jacobsen in the functionalist Bauhaus style, every apartment has two rooms with views of the sea? | |
Mark XIV bomb sight | 7,400 | 927 | ... that the disastrous Air Battle of Heligoland Bight in 1939 led to the development of the fast-acting computerized Mark XIV bomb sight? | |
Frederick McEvoy | 7,300 | 912 | ... that racing driver and world champion bobsledder "Suicide Freddie" was an "internationally known Australian playboy" under surveillance by the FBI? | |
2011 M5 motorway crash | 7,000 | 875 | ... that the use of fireworks has been investigated as a possible cause of the recent 34-vehicle pile-up on the M5 motorway (accident site pictured) in Taunton, Somerset? | |
Baker's Hole | 6,900 | 575 | ... that Baker's Hole, near Dartford, Kent, England, contains a site at which Neanderthals made blades? | |
Galeria Copiola | 6,700 | 837 | ... that the ancient Roman dancer Galeria Copiola reached the age of 104? | |
Djenar Maesa Ayu | 6,500 | 812 | ... that Djenar Maesa Ayu was involved with 1 Woman, 14 Men on her 38th birthday? | |
Lufthansa Flight 502 | 6,500 | 812 | ... that pilot fatigue was a likely factor in the crash of Lufthansa Flight 502 in 1959? | |
Hotel Arctic (Murmansk) | 6,500 | 541 | ... that the Hotel Arctic in Murmansk, Russia, is the tallest building above the Arctic Circle? | |
Branchiostoma lanceolatum | 5,700+ 710= 6,400 |
800 | ... that the invertebrate amphioxus (pictured) serves as a model organism for studying the development of vertebrates? | |
Log-Cauchy distribution | 6,400 | 533 | ... that the log-Cauchy distribution has been proposed as a model for the progression of HIV in individuals? | |
Congo Serpent Eagle | 6,300 | 787 | ... that the Congo Serpent Eagle (pictured) may be one of the few known examples of avian mimicry? | |
Battle of Britain House | 6,300 | 450 | ... that during the Second World War, what became the Battle of Britain House in Ruislip was used for the training of American agents for sabotage missions carried out in occupied France? | |
Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand | 6,200 | 775 | ... that The Who's "Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand" has been interpreted as a song about masturbation? | |
Royal manuscripts, British Library | 6,100 | 508 | ... that the Old Royal Library dating back to the Middle Ages (manuscript detail right) was given to the British Museum by George II in 1757, and is now in the British Library? | |
Moonax | 5,900 | 491 | ... that in 1994 the world's oldest Classic was won by "the world's naughtiest horse"? | |
SMS Helgoland (1912) | 5,200+ 605= 5,800 |
725 | ... that the Austro-Hungarian scout cruiser Helgoland was ceded to Italy on 19 September 1920 as part of the peace settlements that ended World War I? | |
K-143 (Kansas highway) | 5,800 | 725 | ... that state highway K-143 (shield pictured) near Salina, Kansas, uses three different types of pavement on its 4.6 miles (7.4 km)? | |
Cumdach | 5,600 | 466 | ... that some of the reliquaries for books called cumdachs (example pictured) were carried into battle as standards in Medieval Ireland? | |
Dario Gabbai | 5,600 | 466 | ... that while on the winter death march out of Auschwitz in January 1945, Dario Gabbai claimed he survived the cold by visualising Athens in the sunshine? | |
St Mary's Church, Llanfair-yng-Nghornwy | 5,500 | 458 | ... that a 19th-century rector of St Mary's Church (pictured) in Llanfair-yng-Nghornwy, Wales, was awarded a gold medal for his attempt to save a boat during a gale? | |
Acacia binervia | 5,400 | 675 | ... that the foliage of the coast myall (pictured) can produce cyanide when cut? | |
Afterburn (film) | 5,400 | 675 | ... that the 1992 film Afterburn was inspired by a 60 Minutes report about an F-16 fighter aircraft's crash? | |
Brock Avion | 5,400 | 450 | ... that the fuel tank of the Brock Avion is built into the ultralight aircraft's pilot's seat? | |
LiSA | 5,400 | 450 | ... that LiSA was one of the two vocalists for a fictional band in an anime? | |
Froze-to-Death Mountain | 5,300 | 662 | ... that the U.S. Forest Service warns hikers in Montana's Beartooth Mountains not to follow the many cairns on the way to Froze-to-Death Mountain because they are useless for routefinding? | |
History of geomagnetism | 5,300 | 662 | ... that a world map by Gerardus Mercator attributes the Earth's magnetic field to a magnetic mountain (pictured) above the Arctic Circle? | |
Bal des Ardents | 5,300 | 662 | ... that to escape burning at the 1393 Bal des Ardents Charles VI of France huddled under the gown of the Duchesse de Berry, while a lord leaped into a wine vat? | |
Stowe Missal | 5,200 | 650 | ... that the Stowe Missal was written c. 750 and given its cumdach or case c. 1030 (pictured), with one new face added c. 1375? | |
Ghenadie Petrescu | 5,200 | 433 | ... that, when Ghenadie Petrescu (pictured) was ousted from his post of Metropolitan-Primate, Romania experienced protests and riots? | |
1959 TAI Douglas DC-7 accident | 5,200 | 650 | ... that when a DC-7 crashed into a pine forest in France in 1959, rescue workers were hindered by a lack of roads in the area? | |
MS Ravnaas (1931) Arnt J. Mørland |
4,600+ 580= 5,180 |
431 | ... that the cargo ship MS Ravnaas, owned by Arnt J. Mørland's company, was sunk by Japanese aircraft east of the Samar Island about the same time as the attack on Pearl Harbor? |
December 2011
[edit]- Note: "Views / hour" = "DYK views" divided by the number of hours on the Main page (6, 8 or 12)
Article | Image | DYK views | Views / hour | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Highlander (H44) | 77,400 | 9,675 | ... that the British destroyer HMS Highlander (pictured) escorted Convoy SC 122 through the largest convoy battle of World War II in March 1943 and was unsuccessfully attacked by U-441 and U-608? | |
Marching fire | 29,800 | 3,725 | ... that General George S. Patton (pictured) praised the tactic of marching fire during World War II? | |
Krampus | 24,200 (29,000– (3.7+5.9) /2) |
3,025 | ... that in Alpine countries, Saint Nicholas has a devilish companion named Krampus (pictured)? | |
Tarakeswar affair | 17,700 | 2,212 | ... that fish-knives inscribed with Elokeshi's name were sold after her husband decapitated her with a fish-knife (pictured) following her adulterous affair with a Hindu head-priest? | |
Blue Lake (Tasman) | 17,000 | 2,125 | ... that New Zealand's Blue Lake (pictured) has the clearest fresh water reported anywhere in the world? | |
Alfred K. Flowers | 16,800 | 2,100 | ... that Major General Alfred K. Flowers (pictured) is the longest serving airman in United States Air Force history? | |
Messerschmitt P.1112 | 15,500 | 1,937 | ... that the factory in which the Messerschmitt P.1112 (concept model pictured) would have been built was occupied by Allied troops before construction of the aircraft's prototype could be started? | |
An Old Man and his Grandson | 14,600 | 1,825 | ... that Ghirlandaio's An Old Man and his Grandson (detail pictured) portrays a man with a deformed nose sympathetically, in contrast to theories of the era by which external deformities imply character defects? | |
Joanna Horodyńska | 14,400 | 1,800 | ... that Polish model and fashion designer Joanna Horodyńska has presented a TV program while lying in a foam-filled bath tub, and posed three times for Playboy? | |
John Vanderpoel | 12,100 | 1,513 | ... that Georgia O'Keeffe praised her art teacher John Vanderpoel, whose book The Human Figure is a standard reference for art students (example drawing pictured), as "one of the few real teachers I have known"? | |
Lady Lilith | 11,800 | 1,475 | ... that Rossetti overpainted the face of his former mistress in his painting of Lady Lilith (detail pictured) with the face of one of his later models? | |
Henry Paulet, 16th Marquess of Winchester | 11,000 | 1,375 | ... that, when he died in Monte Carlo in 1962, the 16th Marquess of Winchester (pictured) was the oldest-ever member of the House of Lords? | |
Just-world hypothesis | 10,800 | 1,350 | ... that the just-world hypothesis is a cognitive bias that has negative social effects but positive mental health effects? | |
Lepas anserifera | 10,100 | 1,262 | ... that the goose barnacle (pictured) is found attached to driftwood, flotsam and even whales? | |
Mathew Charles Lamb | 9,900 | 1,237 | ... that a spree killer from Ontario, saved from the death penalty by reason of insanity, later received a "hero's funeral"? | |
Hitler Youth Conspiracy | 9,700 | 1,212 | ... that in 1938, the Soviet Union secret police executed 40 teenagers and adults in pursuit of an alleged Hitler Youth Conspiracy, which was later found baseless? | |
BIGOT list | 9,500 | 1,187 | ... that a junior officer on the USS Ancon refused King George VI entry to the ship's intelligence centre because no-one told him the King "was a Bigot"? | |
AFN Munich | 9,300 | 1,162 | ... that the first words of the first AFN broadcast from Allied-occupied Germany in July 1945 so enraged General Patton that he demanded that the responsible person be court-martialed? | |
Banality (sculpture series) | 9,300 | 1,162 | ... that Jeff Koons' giant Banality sculptures feature Michael Jackson, Odie, Saint John the Baptist, The Pink Panther, and a porn star? | |
Study of a Kneeling Nude Girl for The Entombment | 9,200 | 1,150 | ... that Michelangelo's Study of a Kneeling Nude Girl for The Entombment (pictured) is believed to be the earliest existent European drawing of a nude female model? | |
Shock diamond | 9,000 | 1,125 | ... that while normally associated with rockets and jet engines, shock diamonds can also be produced by artillery, volcanoes, and quasars? | |
McGurk effect | 9,000 | 1,125 | ... that when you can see a person speaking, sometimes you hear something different than what is being said because the brain cannot tell whether it is seeing or hearing speech? | |
Jeannie Saffin | 9,000 | 1,125 | ... that the death of Jeannie Saffin has been cited as an example of spontaneous human combustion, due to witness reports that flames were coming from her mouth and she was roaring like a dragon? | |
Red Maasai | 8,500 | 1,062 | ... that the red sheep of the Maasai have been studied for their potential to save farmers hundreds of millions of dollars? | |
Ion Theodorescu-Sion | 8,400 | 1,050 | ... that, six years after shocking the public with his primitivist paintings in 1910, Ion Theodorescu-Sion (self portrait pictured) was employed to depict the Romanian Armed Forces in action? | |
Francis Gleeson (priest) | 8,100 | 1,012 | ... that of the 800 men who received Father Francis Gleeson's general absolution on 8 May 1915 (pictured), 389 were killed or wounded in the subsequent Battle of Aubers Ridge? | |
Stalinist show trial of the Kraków Curia | 8,000 | 1,000 | ... that the anti-religious campaign culminating in the Stalinist show trial of the Kraków Curia (pictured) led to the imprisonment of 123 Polish Roman Catholic priests in just one year? | |
Israel Friedman of Ruzhyn | 7,900 | 987 | ... that the Rebbe of Ruzhin lived like a king, with a palatial home, many servants, a carriage drawn by four white horses, stylish clothing, and solid-gold boots studded with diamonds? | |
Tricholoma atrosquamosum | 7,800 | 975 | ... that the dark-scaled knight is in danger of extinction in the Netherlands? | |
1972 Chicago-O'Hare runway collision | 7,700 | 962 | ... that in 1972, foggy conditions meant rescue crews at O'Hare International Airport were unaware a second aircraft had been involved in a crash until 28 minutes after the accident? | |
Peaches Golding | 7,645 | 956 | ... that Peaches Golding, the first black High Sheriff of Bristol, England, is the daughter of Charlie Brady Hauser, who was arrested for refusing to move to the back of a bus in North Carolina? | |
Alfred E. Jackson | 7,600 | 950 | ... that Confederate brigadier general Alfred E. Jackson was pardoned by President Andrew Johnson because of his kindness toward Johnson's family during the Civil War?" | |
Deep Throat (The X-Files) | 7,500 | 937 | ... that Deep Throat was inspired by Deep Throat? | |
50th New Zealand Parliament Julie Anne Genter Denise Roche Rino Tirikatene Maggie Barry Paul Goldsmith Alfred Ngaro Richard Prosser Denis O'Rourke |
1,200+ 3,700+ 755+ 423+ 506+ 178+ 232+ 182+ 301= 7,477 |
934 | ... that 26 new MPs were elected to the 50th New Zealand Parliament, including Julie Anne Genter (pictured) and Denise Roche (both Greens), Rino Tirikatene (Labour), Maggie Barry, Paul Goldsmith and Alfred Ngaro (National), and Richard Prosser and Denis O'Rourke (both NZ First)? | |
Psilocybe tampanensis | 7,400 | 925 | ... that the rare magic mushroom Psilocybe tampanensis (pictured) was found after its discoverer skipped a "boring taxonomic conference" to go mushroom hunting? | |
Martin-Baker Mk.1 | 7,400 | 925 | ... that the Martin-Baker Mk.1 (pictured), used by a test pilot to escape a crashing Armstrong Whitworth A.W.52, was the first ejection seat to save the life of a British pilot? | |
HMS Porcupine (G93) | 7,300 | 912 | ... that after HMS Porcupine was nearly split in two by a torpedo, the halves were nicknamed HMS Pork and HMS Pine? | |
Kurt and Sid | 7,000 | 875 | ... that a cardboard box in Kurt and Sid, about Sid Vicious trying to convince Kurt Cobain not to kill himself, was said to have more empathy than the script? | |
Harrington Hump | 7,000 | 875 | ... that the Harrington Hump has been built for railway stations in the United Kingdom for mobility-impaired access, since platform heights are not standardised and refurbishment is very expensive? | |
Tich (dog) | 7,000 | 875 | ... that the mixed-breed dog Tich was awarded the animal's Victoria Cross for devotion to duty with the King's Royal Rifle Corps during the Second World War? | |
The X-Files Mythology, Volume 1 – Abduction | 7,000 | 875 | ... that The X-Files Mythology, Volume 1 was well-received, despite its lack of liver-eating elastic monsters? | |
Experiment (horse powered boat) | 6,900 | 862 | ... that the Experiment was a boat powered by horses running on a treadmill and propelled by a then-novel type of screw propeller? | |
Xu Haidong | 6,900 | 862 | ... that one of the highest-ranking generals in China was injured in battle nine times? | |
Constant Puyo | 6,783 | 848 | ... that French photographer Constant Puyo was an advocate of pictorialism, aiming to emulate painting in his photographic images (example pictured)? | |
Lawang Sewu: Dendam Kuntilanak Lawang Sewu |
3,800+ 2,900= 6,700 |
837 | ... that Lawang Sewu: Kuntilanak's Vengeance was described by a critic as "truly 'raping' an icon of Semarang", Lawang Sewu (pictured)? | |
Apkallu | 6,700 | 837 | ... that in Mesopotamian mythology, the Apkallu (relief sculpture pictured) were sent by the god Enki, from Dilmun to teach human beings various aspects of civilization? | |
Gerrit Beneker | 6,700 | 837 | ... that Gerrit Beneker's 1918 poster "Sure! We'll Finish the Job" (pictured) sold over three million copies? | |
Tylopilus alboater Tylopilus atronicotianus |
5,000+ 1,700= 6,700 |
837 | ... that the black velvet bolete is not the false one? | |
Sevmorput | 6,700 | 837 | ... that Sevmorput is the only nuclear-powered cargo ship currently in service? | |
Traveler's Rest (Lolo, Montana) | 6,700 | 837 | ... that Traveler's Rest near Lolo, Montana, is the only place along the Lewis and Clark Trail where physical evidence of the Lewis and Clark Expedition has been found? | |
Karni Liddell Branka Pupovac Hamish MacDonald (athlete) |
2,900+ 2,100+ 1,600= 6,600 |
825 | ... that Australian Paralympians Karni Liddell, Branka Pupovac and Hamish MacDonald were all photographed for a nude calendar? | |
Convair Model 58-9 | 6,600 | 825 | ... that an airliner version of the supersonic B-58 bomber was expected to carry 52 passengers at over Mach 2? | |
Argentine tea culture | 6,500 | 812 | ... that maté tea served in a traditional gourd cup (pictured) should never be stirred with the straw according to Argentine tea culture etiquette? | |
Palazzo trousers | 6,500 | 812 | ... that during the 1960s, some women opted to circumvent restaurant restrictions on women's clothing by wearing palazzo trousers or culottes as evening wear? | |
Paleodictyon nodosum | 6,500 | 812 | ... that Paleodictyon nodosum made use of a new source of energy not dependent on the Sun? | |
Artemisia filifolia | 6,300 | 787 | ... that the Navajo tribe used sand sagebrush (pictured) as toilet paper? | |
Theory of historical trajectory | 6,100 | 762 | ... that Karl Marx's theory of historical trajectory attempted to prove the long-term unsustainability of capitalism? | |
HMS Blanche (H47) | 6,000 | 750 | ... that HMS Blanche was the first British destroyer sunk by the Germans during the Second World War? | |
Cymric (schooner) | 6,000 | 750 | ... that in November 1921, the schooner Cymric collided with a tram in Dublin? | |
Samuel-François Lhéritier | 5,900 | 737 | ... that General of Division Samuel-François, Baron Lhéritier (pictured) was wounded at the Battle of Waterloo while leading a combined division of cuirassiers and dragoons? | |
Pesse canoe | 5,900 | 737 | ... that the 10,000 year old Pesse canoe, the world's oldest known boat, was found in a Dutch peat bog? | |
HMS Basilisk (H11) | 5,800 | 725 | ... that the British destroyer HMS Basilisk evacuated a total of 695 men on 31 May 1940 from Dunkirk before she was sunk by German aircraft the next day? | |
Roger Craig (Jeopardy! contestant) | 5,600 | 700 | ... that Roger Craig holds the record for largest one-day winnings on the regular version of Jeopardy! and is thought to have won the largest single Daily Double prize in the show's history? | |
Mt. Shasta Brewing Company | 5,500 | 687 | ... that Mt. Shasta Brewing Company's slogan, "Try Legal Weed", was initially refused by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau? | |
D.E. Frantz House | 5,400 | 675 | ... that the D.E. Frantz House (pictured) is the only Victorian house in Aspen, Colorado, that still has its oriel window? | |
2Shy | 5,400 | 675 | ... that the "unassuming" villain of The X-Files episode "2Shy" has been compared to those from the earlier episodes "Squeeze" and "Irresistible"? | |
Kurt Chew-Een Lee | 5,400 | 675 | ... that after earning the Navy Cross and getting wounded in combat, Lieutenant Kurt Chew-Een Lee took a Jeep and returned to the battle arena with his arm in a sling? | |
Boden Fortress Radio Bunker | 5,300 | 662 | ... that the first words of the first radio broadcast in Swedish history, transmitted from Boden Fortress Radio Bunker, were the profanity "jävlar anamma"? | |
Reward dependence | 5,200 | 650 | ... that adolescents with Excessive Internet video Game Play (EIGP) addiction have high reward dependence scores? | |
Blephilia hirsuta | 5,200 | 650 | ... that 30-to-120-centimetre (12 to 47 in) tall hairy pagodas can be found throughout eastern North America? | |
Lepas anatifera | 5,100 | 637 | ... that several pelagic gooseneck barnacles were once found attached to an American crocodile? | |
Sheila ki jawani | 5,100 | 637 | ... that Katrina Kaif considers the item number Sheila ki jawani to be one of her raunchiest ever? |