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In 2011, France had to destroy an armored vehicle in a Li... | funfact.wiki | funfact.wiki
In 2011, France had to destroy an armored vehicle in a Libyan city. Their fix: a 300 kg concrete bomb — a casing of concrete, not explosives. No blast, no shrapnel; the GPS-guided block smashed the vehicle on impact. The USA had used the trick in Iraqi no-fly zones since the 1990s.
  • France
  • Libya
  • USA
  • Concrete
  • Weapon
  • Military
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In 1876, fresh meat chunks rained from a clear Kentucky sky in the USA. Those brave enough to taste them reported flavors similar to lamb or venison.
  • USA
  • Kentucky
  • Rain
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The largest living organism on Earth is a mushroom. In Oregon, USA, a single honey fungus in Malheur National Forest spans an area larger than 1,000 football fields.
  • Organism
  • Mushroom
  • USA
  • Oregon
  • Honey fungus
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The term 'spam mail' comes from Monty Python's comedy sketch 'Spam.' During World War II, the US supplied massive amounts of SPAM cans to Britain, and the Brits' frustration inspired the sketch. The name later stuck to annoying promotional emails.
  • Monty Python
  • World War II
  • USA
  • Britain
  • Internet
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In 1800, Paris enacted an ordinance banning women from wearing trousers. The law was technically enforced until 2013, with amendments in 1892 and 1909 allowing trousers only while holding bicycle handlebars or horse reins.
  • Paris
  • Woman
  • Trousers
  • Bicycle
  • Law
  • History
  • France
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Until the 19th century, the Red River in the southern USA had a 260km-long natural log jam called the "Great Raft." Accumulated over centuries, grass and trees even grew on top of it, allowing people to walk across the river.
  • USA
  • Nature
  • History
  • Log
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