Interesting Facts About Biology
1: For a Cup of Coffee

People who can’t begin their days without a cup of coffee, they would
have to yell for 8 years, 7 months, and 6 days, and thus produce enough
sound energy to heat up one cup of coffee when the energy resources of
the world go extinct.
2: A Bomb in Making
Making of an atomic bomb isn’t as easy as it seems. If one wishes to
make a natural atomic bomb then he shall have to fart continuously for 6
years and 9 months, so as to produce enough gas to create the energy of
an atomic bomb. When the world energy resources go extinct superpowers
are going to have a tough time threatening each other.
3: Pressure Pump
Squirting blood up to 10 feet is a cake walk for a human heart as it’s capable of creating enough pressure.
4: A Deadly Weight Loss Plan
Head banging against a wall uses 150 calories an hour, but how does
it matter because death would have picked you up by then with insanity
laughing at your stupidity.
5: Mutual Fear
On a regular basis people are more scared of spiders than death,
without realizing that a spider runs to shelter every time it touches a
human and cleans itself off the germs.
6:A True Inspiration
An ant is capable of lifting 50 times its own weight and pulling 30 times its own weight.
7: Blessing in Disguise
Elephants are the only ones cursed with the inability of jumping. We
must thank god for that or we would have been having innumerable
earthquakes.
8: A Brainless Fish
Lucky are starfishes that don’t have brains or like humans they would
have been capable of thinking of problems that don’t even exist in the
first place and giving themselves a headache.
9: Respectable Appendix
The appendix once declared to be useless has now been found to be
useful to the bacteria that help our digestive system functioning. It’s
used to get some respite from the tension of the hysterical activity of
the gut.
10: The Explained Blood
Our blood is red colored because the iron in the blood is bound in a
ring of atoms in hemoglobin called porphyrin and it’s the shape of this
structure that produces the color. The redness of your hemoglobin
depends on whether there is oxygen bounded to it. With the presence of
oxygen, the shape of the porphyrin is changed, giving the red blood
cells a more vivid shade.
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