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💡 This is October’s edition of “Things I Learned”. In addition to the standard set of facts, there is a cool set of images at the end.
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Things I Learned
- There is a city in Alaska named Unalaska. (cite)
- 22% of the world's fresh surface water is held in Lake Baikal (cite)
- Turkish airlines flies to more countries than any other airline in the world. (cite)
- If you had invested in the stock market from 1960-1980 and beaten the market by 5% each year, you would have made less money than if you had invested from 1980-2000 and underperformed the market by 5% a year (cite).
- The construction of coins in Ancient Sparta involved dipping them in vinegar, so as to make them too brittle for non-currency uses (e.g. tools, transport). (cite)
- The largest church on earth — larger than Saint Peter’s Basilica — is located in Yamoussoukro, Ivory Coast, a city with population 212,000. (cite)
- The only MLB team that owns its own plane is the Detroit Tigers (cite)
- In 1957, Ghana had the same per capita income as South Korea (cite)
- Half of all publicly traded firms are unprofitable. (cite)
- Every number of the form ababab (e.g. 464646) is divisible by 37 (cite).
- Sharks are older than the north star. (cite)
- 40% of Native Americans reported voting for Republicans in 2022. (cite)
- Half of the world’s cashews are sold by Costco (cite).
- Real median net worth for U.S. households was up 37% from 2019-2022. This is the biggest increase in 30 years. (cite)
- The origins of why “Friday the 13th” is considered unlucky is not known. The leading theories are (1) a Norse myth in which Loki shows up unannounced as the thirteenth guest to a party (2) Tarot cards in which the card numbered 13 often has Death on it. (cite)
- There are more ETFs than stocks. (cite)
- Tom Brady, better known for his NFL career, was drafted by the Montreal Expos in the 1995 MLB Draft (cite).