Now you Know
10871. Body Facts
Romans used to clean their teeth with urine, and it was used as a mouthwash until the 1800s in Europe.
10872. Body Facts
The gunge that collects in your belly button is a mix of dirt, dead skin cells and oils from your body.
10873. Body Facts
Your belly button is formed from the shrivelled up stump of the umbilical cord – the tube that connected you to your mother's body before you were born.
10874. Body Facts
Over a ton of pubic hair has to be filtered out of London's sewage each year and removed to landfill sites.
10875. Body Facts
A very fat person who flushes an aeroplane toilet while still sitting on it can have their rectum sucked out by the pull of the toilet's flush.
10876. Body Facts
At any one time, parasites account for onehundredth of your body weight.
10877. Body Facts
Human hair grows about just over a centimetre (half an inch) a month.
10879. Body Facts
The botfly lays its eggs on a mosquito, and they hatch when the mosquito bites someone.The maggot grows for six weeks in a lump under the persons' skin called a warble until it pops out when it's fully grown.
10880. Body Facts
Air you swallow, and gas released from food as you digest it, comes out as a burp or a fart – which one depends on how far through your intestines it has got.
10881. Body Facts
Expert botfly squeezers (employed to remove botfly maggots from people) can shoot a botfly from a warble distances of 3 metres (10 feet) or more.
10882. Body Facts
When you die, the bacteria in your gut start to eat away at you from the inside.
10883. Body Facts
The best recorded distance for projectile vomiting is 8 metres (27 feet)!
10884. Body Facts
A man with the stage name of Enigma has had surgery to give him horns on his head. He is hoping to get a tail sometime in the future.
10885. Body Facts
In some parts of the world, people wear extremely heavy ear-rings to weigh their ears down and stretch the lobes.They can weigh up to half a kilogram (1 pound) and hang from huge, long holes in the ear lobe.
10887. Body Facts
When you breathe normally, air goes into your nose at about 6.5 kilometres (4 miles) per hour.When you take a good sniff at something, it goes in at 32 kilometres (20 miles) per hour. When you sneeze, it comes out at 160 kilometres (100 miles) per hour!
10889. Body Facts
A scab forms because cells in your blood called platelets make a very thin fibre that traps other blood cells and holds them in a layer that dries out over a scratch or cut.
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Phobia
Phobia :
noctiphobia : fear of the night.
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