10 Interesting Stories Of Conjoined Twins

SEE ALSO: Top 10 Amazing Facts About The Original Siamese Twins Symmetrical conjoined twins generally have all the body parts and organs needed to live as two complete individuals if separated. The only birth anomalies occur where the twins are fused. With asymmetrical conjoined twins, one twin is often small, weak, and dependent on his sibling for nutrition. These twins may be separated to increase the chances that the strong one will survive....

January 12, 2023 · 7 min · 1491 words · Carolyn Waugh

10 Intriguing Fan Theories About Star Wars The Force Awakens

Be warned, some of the theories posted below might be considered possible spoilers. Or they might all be completely wrong. Read on and find out. 10Rey Is A Legendary Character’s Kid From the trailers, it’s clear that the three main characters of The Force Awakens are Rey (played by Daisy Ridley), Finn (John Boyega) and Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac). During a panel discussion, Ridley revealed that her character was a scavenger living in a ship graveyard on the planet Jakku....

January 12, 2023 · 13 min · 2568 words · Armando Bittinger

10 Jaw Dropping Tales About Dentistry

10 Honest Abe’s Chloroform Abraham Lincoln had terrible dental anxiety rooted in a faulty tooth extraction in 1841 that resulted in part of his jawbone breaking off. The 16th US president endured such pain without anesthesia. Thus, when a severe toothache came calling years later, he wasn’t the slightest bit amused. Reaching into his pocket, Lincoln withdrew a bottle of chloroform, inhaled it, and nodded for the procedure to begin as he gently slipped away into unconsciousness....

January 12, 2023 · 7 min · 1473 words · John Reynolds

10 Mind Blowing Futuristic Wartime Technologies

10Temperature Resistance All humans have a natural neurological pathway, known as TRPM8, responsible for sensing cold. When TRPM8 converts the physical feeling of cold into an electrical signal, it kick-starts the common symptoms that you feel in a cold environment: shivering, chattering teeth, decreased blood flow to the extremities. Those are survival mechanisms on their own, designed to warm you back up, but they have a tendency to show up even in less than life-threatening situations....

January 12, 2023 · 11 min · 2148 words · David Vanschoick

10 Mind Blowing Things That Happened This Week 1 11 19

And my, my, my, wasn’t our first full week of 2019 a busy one for news? After a short hiatus, the US Congress reconvened and immediately plunged into partisan rancor. Riots and protests rocked three major countries. China began sniffing around the dark side of the Moon. And all the while, news of coups and kings kept the rest of the world glued to their social media feeds. Time to kick off the new year in style!...

January 12, 2023 · 10 min · 2067 words · Chelsea Short

10 Mistaken Origins Of Well Known Things

10Haggis There is no doubt that Scotland loves its haggis (a pudding made by stuffing various parts of a sheep into the sheep’s stomach). Most credit this love to Scotland’s national poet, Robert Burns, who exalted the virtues of the dish in his poem “Address to a Haggis.” Nowadays that passion has transformed haggis into a national dish and the main course during a traditional Burns supper. However, all of this does not change the fact that haggis wasn’t invented in Scotland....

January 12, 2023 · 10 min · 2124 words · Bobbie Mcdanel

10 Morbidly Bizarre Facts About The Ghost Town Of Pripyat

The once-thriving city of Pripyat, which housed many of the nuclear facility’s workers, became a ghost town overnight as frantic residents were evacuated from their homes. They were told the evacuation was a precautionary measure for a few days, maybe a few weeks. They would, of course, never return to their homes again. 10 Huge Shell Entombs Reactor 4 In late 2016, 30 years after the Chernobyl disaster, a huge protective steel and concrete sarcophagus was completed over the blast site at Reactor 4....

January 12, 2023 · 9 min · 1754 words · Charmaine Manning

10 More Controversies Of The Future

10The Death Of Privacy You’ve heard of Google Glass. It’s a wearable computer that looks (surprise!) an awful lot like a pair of glasses. With the wink of an eye it’s capable of taking pictures or video or doing a trillion other absurdly clever things. And it could be about to make society a whole lot nastier. The problem comes from facial recognition technology. Studies have shown that this tech can already pick people out from a crowd and pull up almost anything on them—from Facebook pictures to social security numbers to Linkedin profiles and more....

January 12, 2023 · 11 min · 2264 words · Anthony Gilman

10 Most Horrific Circus Accidents In History

However, the life of a circus performer is not all successful stunts and cheering children. As these ten circus accidents demonstrate, life in the ring has seen its fair share of death and destruction as well. We begin our list with a well-known tragedy—the execution of an elephant. On September 12, 1916, Mary trampled her handler, Red Eldridge, to death. There are various accounts of what led to the attack—from Eldridge prodding Mary with a stick and infuriating her to speculation that she was simply bored....

January 12, 2023 · 6 min · 1176 words · John Frederick

10 Mundane Jobs That Horrified Our Ancestors

But that’s nothing compared to the horrors endured by the workforces of yesteryear. Thumb though a history book, and suddenly, even the most run-of-the-mill job springs to truly terrifying life. Keep these vicious vocations in mind the next time you find yourself praying for five o’clock. 10 Waiting Tables Waiting tables has long been the domain of struggling actors and those working on their screenplays; it’s sort of a holding-pattern profession, not something you aspire to....

January 12, 2023 · 9 min · 1876 words · Mark Gray

10 Mysterious Graves That Defy Explanation

10St. Augustine Donkey Not all mysterious graves contain human remains. In St. Augustine, Florida, a local archaeologist was baffled by a unique and bizarre burial of a donkey. The animal was discovered under 120 centimeters (4 ft) of earth and dates to the second half of the 17th century. The animal has an indent on the top of its skull and was likely killed by a blow to the head. But what happened afterward is hard to explain....

January 12, 2023 · 12 min · 2470 words · Clarence Zimmerman

10 Odd Obsessions Of Famous Philosophers

10Rene DescartesPassion For Cross-Eyed Ladies The Father of Modern Philosophy, Rene Descartes (1596–1650), maintained close friendships and correspondence with powerful and wealthy women, such as Queen Christina of Sweden and the exiled Princess Elizabeth of England. The women in his personal life were a different story. Descartes never married and only had one child, an illegitimate daughter, with one of the servants in his home. And, until early adulthood, Descartes’s greatest passion was reserved for women with crossed eyes....

January 12, 2023 · 11 min · 2282 words · Ruth Oberry

10 Odd Thefts States Are Known For

The Center for Retail Research says that women are more likely to steal cosmetics, clothes, jewelry, and perfume. Men go for the electronics, especially TVs and power tools. However, people steal far stranger things than vanity and entertainment items. Odder still are the extreme lengths to which people will go to take what’s not theirs. Each US state has its own eccentricities that make it unique, especially when it comes to what people are stealing and why....

January 12, 2023 · 10 min · 2028 words · Naomi Lawson

10 Of History S Most Ambitious Grimoires

Of course, for the modern man, gaining a fortune or winning the love of his beloved is simply not enough cause to memorize page upon page of ancient Hebrew. When compared to the success rate of these books, one would have a better chance of winning the lottery or expecting his beloved to accept him for who he is. It is a dated thing to waste your time on anything less than the acquirement of unbridled power....

January 12, 2023 · 7 min · 1288 words · Toi Cardenas

10 Of History S Most Scandalous Women

Many of these women would be dealt with through violence or general mistreatment, but they still rose up despite the pressure to conform. Whether it be through displays of love, knowledge, or passion, the following women truly scandalized their societies with their antics. 10 Julie D’Aubigny Julie d’Aubigny was a sword fighter and opera singer who lived during the late 1600s and early 1700s. Julie dressed as a boy from an early age and frequently learned alongside boys, being taught dancing, reading, drawing, and fencing....

January 12, 2023 · 9 min · 1733 words · Billie Carlton

10 Offbeat Stories You Might Have Missed This Week 12 1 18

This week’s list is animal-heavy as we talk about the Siberian unicorn, the largest steer in Australia, and an ant that likes to decapitate other ants and decorate its nest with skulls. In non-animal-related news, scientists eat LEGO pieces for science, a monk is arrested for hosting drug-fueled sex parties, and a football club fakes a player’s death. 10 Science Gets Messy Science has a rich and weird history of researchers who were willing to use their own bodies for experiments....

January 12, 2023 · 10 min · 2040 words · Royal Boettcher

10 Parts In The History Of Kinky Sex

Kinks and taboos have been built into the very fabric of the sexual experience since the dawn of time, and people have been kinky for as long as they’ve been having sex. Have you ever wondered where your kinks come from? Have you ever thought about who started this unorthodox sex act or that one? From the wild orgies of the Roman Emperor Caligula to the curious and mysterious practices of small Christian sects, world history leaves us no shortage of bizarre, unusual, and downright nasty kinks that all began long before contemporary festivals and modernity....

January 12, 2023 · 10 min · 2045 words · Steven Velez

10 People Shot To Death On Video

It is truly horrifying to watch someone being killed with a gun. Since the creation of video, thousands of people have been murdered on camera. In some cases, the footage has been featured on television documentaries and news broadcasts. The videos are always shocking and give people a true sense of how dangerous guns are. 10 Darrell Lunsford On January 23, 1991, a constable named Darrell Lunsford was shot and killed in Nacogdoches County, Texas....

January 12, 2023 · 15 min · 3109 words · Ethel Hangartner

10 Pivotal Days That Turned The Tide Of The Crusades

10The Siege And Fall Of AcreMay 18, 1291 Acre is an incredible city, located in Israel in Western Galilee. It’s been occupied since at least 1900 B.C., and the city that stands today dates back to around the 18th century. Buildings have been long built on top of buildings, though, and buried somewhere under the more modern city are the remains of one of the Crusader strongholds of Israel. Acre changed hands repeatedly throughout the Crusades....

January 12, 2023 · 13 min · 2618 words · Steven Walker

10 Pop Culture Icons With Cleverly Hidden Insults

Usually, though, we find ourselves unable to do anything about it and the feeling sort of fades away. This is where we differ from the creators of our favorite books, movies, and TV shows. Apparently, having an audience awakens all sorts of long-dormant hostilities, leading to the sneaky placement of insults in places you’d never suspect. Check out the following bizarre ways that the creative community surreptitiously slammed their enemies....

January 12, 2023 · 12 min · 2393 words · Margaret Holbrook