Wikipedia:Recent additions/2014/April#13 April 2014
{{DYKbox}}
{{DYK archive header}}
{{DYK monthly archive nav}}
[{{fullurl:Template:DYK monthly archive nav|action=edit}} Edit the DYK archive navigation template]
bgcolor=
type=fulltext
prefix=Wikipedia:Recent additions
break=yes
width=60
searchbuttonlabel=Search archives
Did you know...
Please add the line
for each new day and the time the set was removed from the DYK template at the top for the newly posted set of archived hooks. This will ensure all times are based on UTC time and accurate. This page should be archived once a month. Thanks.
=30 April 2014=
- 22:51, 30 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the global poultry industry was expected to produce 65.5 million tonnes of eggs (pictured) in 2013?
- ... that Abbi Jacobson plays a fictionalized version of herself on the Comedy Central series Broad City?
- ... that despite influencing several Beatles' songs, Arthur Alexander's 1962 song "Soldier of Love (Lay Down Your Arms)" was nearly forgotten until a Beatles' bootleg recording surfaced more than a decade later?
- ... that Madman's Drum was a novel in woodcuts?
- ... that Kelly Tanner and Chris Raudman were among the championship winners during 1996 in NASCAR?
- ... that Yang Bojun, who was taught to read Confucian classics by his grandfather, became an author of several influential commentaries on them?
- 14:36, 30 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that eight years after rowing a Titanic lifeboat and honoring her drowned son with a Harvard library, Eleanor Widener waited on a yacht (pictured) while her new husband fought "scantily-clad, ferocious cannibals"?
- ... that "La Popola" was banned in the Dominican Republic because of its sexual lyrics?
- ... that former IAS cadre Pancham Lal is one of the candidates of the All India Forward Bloc in the 2014 election?
- ... that Meldon Viaduct, on Dartmoor in Devon, is one of only two surviving lattice truss railway bridges in Britain?
- ... that the box jellyfish Tripedalia cystophora feeds on the copepod Dioithona oculata which swarms in sunlit patches of water among mangrove roots?
- ... that a symposium on Genghis Khan led to the removal of Daramyn Tömör-Ochir from the Mongolian Politburo for being a "nationalist"?
- 05:01, 30 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that American librarian Josephus Nelson Larned (pictured) sat at a desk opposite Mark Twain when they both wrote for the Buffalo Express?
- ... that during the 20-event 2014 IPC Powerlifting World Championships, 15 world records were equalled or surpassed?
- ... that the Bluefin-21 is an underwater drone that is being used in search operations for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370?
- ... that Maryland Delegate Torrey C. Brown, a physician, once assisted in saving the life of a fellow legislator who suffered a heart attack during a debate?
- ... that the Revolutionary Socialist Party (Bolshevik) leader A.V. Thamarakshan is supported by the BJP in this year's parliamentary poll?
- ... that Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band{{'s}} title track was once described as a "revolutionary moment in the creative life" of the Beatles?
=29 April 2014=
- 20:46, 29 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that many mountains on Io (example pictured) have straight margins?
- ... that medieval historian Seta Dadoyan was awarded the David Anhaght medal for her contributions to Armenian philosophical studies?
- ... that one of Nader Kadhim's main motivations to write Saving Hope was to defend the hope "revived" by the Arab Spring?
- ... that Swedish soprano Malin Byström sang the title role in Thaïs at Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia in 2012?
- ... that in 1970 the State of Connecticut acquired 198 acres (108 ha) of Haley Farm from A. C. White for a total of $300,000 and declared it a state park?
- ... that Bert "Yank" Levy, who taught the British Home Guard and coauthored one of the first books on guerrilla warfare, said a cheese cutter could be used as a weapon?
=28 April 2014=
- 16:00, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that MacLellan's Castle (pictured) used to look like a haystack?
- ... that Australian actress Yael Stone{{`s}} Boston accent on Orange Is the New Black has been called "the most amazing accent on television"?
- ... that cellarettes were designed with 3-D optical illusion art to conceal their illegal alcoholic beverages during prohibition in the United States?
- ... that the late 16th-century yadu poems by Queen Hsinbyushin Medaw are among the earliest Burmese language records of Lan Na?
- ... that mountaineer Joe Puryear made the first ascents of six peaks in the Himalayas?
- ... that parts of Cantiones sacrae, 40 choral pieces composed by Heinrich Schütz during the Thirty Years' War, have been described as intensely expressive, others as happy?
- 08:00, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that a 2009 protest by gay men in People's Park (pictured) "has been hailed as a milestone" in the history of LGBT rights in China?
- ... that American snowboarders Taylor Gold and his sister Arielle both went to Sochi to compete in the 2014 Winter Olympics, but both saw their efforts derailed by falls?
- ... that the Australian Renewable Energy Agency is helping fund construction of the southern hemisphere's largest solar power station?
- ... that Cassey Ho discovered an image of a model with a photoshopped thigh gap on Target's website?
- ... that when Nimdoma Sherpa summited Mount Everest at the age of 16, she became the youngest woman to do so at the time?
- 00:00, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Maximus/Minimus (pictured) is a food truck based in Seattle, Washington that was built with modifications to resemble a pig's snout and ears?
- ... that Jack Charlton was the first foreigner to manage the Republic of Ireland national football team?
- ... that actress Danielle Brooks has been cast as the first black woman on the HBO series Girls?
- ... that Twomile Run has the highest potential fish biodiversity of any stream in the Kettle Creek watershed?
- ... that the plaque on the memorial of Czech poet Viktor Dyk shows only his name?
- ... that it was wrongly said that Frank Crocker killed himself after building the pub now called Crocker's Folly in the wrong place?
=27 April 2014=
- 16:00, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Vassar College students living in Raymond House (pictured) were able to receive $115 off their annual bills in exchange for housekeeping duties?
- ... that Bulgarian footballer Mihail Lozanov, nicknamed The Tank, captained FC Bayern Munich in the 1930s and reportedly shattered the crossbar with a powerful shot?
- ... that The Music of Grand Theft Auto V features an original score composed by a team of producers for the video game Grand Theft Auto V?
- ... that Ty Glaser shadowed a surgical team at Whipps Cross University Hospital to help her prepare for her role as Gemma Wilde on Holby City?
- ... that the Easter hymn "Gelobt sei Gott im höchsten Thron" was written in 1531, but is known with the 1609 dancing tune by Melchior Vulpius?
- ... that in 1944, gun-wielding models launched fashion designer Robert Piguet{{'s}} debut fragrance Bandit?
- 08:00, 27 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Nancy Kelsey (pictured), the first white woman to cross overland from Missouri to California, was also known as the "Betsy Ross of California"?
- ... that People's Park in Ürümqi was once the site of a Dragon King Temple?
- ... that The Last Arrow was praised for its "inventive re-imagining" of the Robin Hood legend, although one reviewer felt that its "sadistic sexual torture may offend some"?
- ... that after Rembrandt toothpaste discontinued its canker sore toothpaste, the {{convert|3|oz|abbr=on}} tube that had formerly sold for $6.99 instead sold for approximately $50, on eBay?
- ... that screenwriter Geoff LaTulippe was offered a directing job by the president of Paramount Film Group after the latter saw one of LaTulippe's short films?
- ... that as of 2009, the Indian submarine Sindhukirti had spent 10 out of her 30 years of service in refits?
=26 April 2014=
- 23:50, 26 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that, in 1966, the Teaching Assistants Association (1970 strike pictured) of the University of Wisconsin–Madison became the first graduate-student labor union?
- ... that the title character in William Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus may have been inspired by Emperor Andronicus Comnenus, who also shot arrows with messages attached?
- ... that Kiesza had a broken rib while filming her music video "Hideaway"?
- ... that E. Gail de Planque was the first woman and first health physicist to become a Commissioner at the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission?
- ... that abnormal P50 suppression is an endophenotype for schizophrenia?
- ... that in 1919 Hans Jürgen von der Wense composed a piece for piano, clarinet, and suspended metal colander?
- 15:35, 26 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Priddy Nine Barrows and Ashen Hill Barrow Cemeteries (shown in the video) include 17 round barrows but may have had 20 in the Bronze Age?
- ... that Ernest Psichari, grandson of liberal philosopher Ernest Renan, became an idol of right-wing French nationalism?
- ... that according to a national report, the conviction rate of rape in Germany has declined, from 20% in the 1980s to 13% by 2000?
- ... that Malcolm took the throne from Macbeth after the latter killed Malcolm's father, King Duncan, in William Shakespeare's Macbeth?
- ... that the Praja Socialist Party, the Ambedkarite Harijan Mandal and the Akali Dal formed an alliance ahead of the 1962 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election?
- ... that the "world's luckiest man" survived seven brushes with death, then won the lottery?
- 07:20, 26 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that in 1925, Wally Pipp (pictured) "took the two most expensive aspirin in history"?
- ... that the Joffrey Ballet is debuting a new choreography to Prokofiev's score of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in the United States, 30 years after it debuted Cranko's adaptation?
- ... that Gabor Racz fled Budapest in 1956 after the Hungarian revolution and went on to hold a million-dollar endowed chair in anesthesiology at Texas Tech?
- ... that Dakshin Gangotri, India's first research station in the Antarctic, was an unmanned base built in 8 weeks by an 81-member team?
- ... that Trent Reznor recorded The Downward Spiral at 10050 Cielo Drive, the house where Sharon Tate was murdered?
- ... that mental health advocate Eleanor Owen is known in the Washington State Legislature as "The Barracuda"?
=25 April 2014=
- 23:05, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the West African green mamba (pictured) has one of the most rapidly acting venoms among all snakes?
- ... that Morris H. Whitehouse designed several Oregon buildings which made it to the National Register of Historic Places list, including the Conro Fiero House-turned-restaurant?
- ... that Allan du Toit was 15 years old when he wrote his first published book?
- ... that The Widow's Son pub is named for the legend of a widow who every Good Friday baked a hot cross bun for her only son, in the hope that he was not lost at sea and would one day return home?
- ... that St Mary's Church, Preston, is now a conservation centre?
- ... that after Emerson Etheridge returned to the U.S. Congress even though his state had seceded, he was made Clerk of the House of Representatives?
- 14:50, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the 1915 landing at Anzac Cove on Turkey's Gallipoli peninsula is marked on 25 April each year by a dawn service at the cove (pictured), attended by 50,000 people in 2013?
- ... that in the 2003–04 season, Arsenal won the Premier League at White Hart Lane, home of their rivals Tottenham Hotspur?
- ... that Rezan Zuğurlu, who spent eight months in the infamous Diyarbakır Prison, became Turkey's youngest mayor when she was elected by Lice at the age of 25?
- ... that the Early Nationalists were the beginning of the organised national movement in India?
- ... that a judge has ordered that information be removed from the Greek Wikipedia biography of politician Theodore Katsanevas?
- ... that the Australian plant Banksia coccinea is grown commercially in South Africa, North America, New Zealand, and Israel as a cut flower crop?
- 06:35, 25 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Garland Trench Mortar (pictured), used by British and Australian forces in the Gallipoli Campaign, was essentially a steel tube affixed to a wooden base that fired a Jam Tin Grenade?
- ... that Nat Sanders won the inaugural Independent Spirit Award for Best Editing in 2014?
- ... that Union Films attempted to draw educated audiences by hiring a doctor to star in their film?
- ... that Lyndsie Holland played the Gilbert and Sullivan contralto roles with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company?
- ... that Eckhart Hall at the University of Chicago is named for miller and state senator Bernard A. Eckhart?
- ... that Corporal Edgar Worrall, who claims to have fired the last shot at Lone Pine, was one of over 1,100 Australians to keep a diary during World War I?
=24 April 2014=
- 22:20, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that actor Yenovk Shahen (pictured) was arrested and ultimately murdered during the Armenian Genocide?
- ... that wing-assisted incline running (WAIR) is a hypothesis about the origin of avian flight derived from observing modern partridges?
- ... that British composer Thomas Adès thought he was having a heart attack when composing Asyla, a contemporary classical composition with techno music characteristics?
- ... that the Iraqi Railway Workers Union was banned in the midst of a 1945 strike?
- ... that in 1957, painter Mary Potter swapped houses on the east coast of England with composer Benjamin Britten?
- ... that the easiest difficulty level in the video game Alien Rage is "challenging", and the second easiest is "hard"?
- 14:05, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Vysočina Region is home to more UNESCO World Heritage Sites (Telč pictured) than any other region of the Czech Republic?
- ... that differences on the issue of Muslim personal law led to a split between the All India Muslim League and the Communist Party of India (Marxist)?
- ... that skier Cameron Rahles-Rahbula carried the Australian flag at the Opening Ceremony of the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, but was unable to compete in any of his events?
- ... that La India's recordings of "Ese Hombre" and "Dicen Que Soy", on her album Dicen Que Soy, have been described as "anthems for female salsa lovers"?
- ... that whilst the Communist Party of the Soviet Union opposed the setting up of an independent Jewish party organization, an autonomous Jewish Communist Party was founded in Bielorussia?
- ... that opium poppies are grown in Hagley, Tasmania?
- 01:50, 24 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that judges tried to ban a Charles Chaplin painting (example pictured) as they felt it was "too erotically suggestive"?
- ... that wild populations of the black rock scorpion are depleted due to collecting by the pet trade?
- ... that Dr. Edith Claypole died of typhoid while working on immunizations for WWI troops, even though she had been immunized herself?
- ... that GenePeeks{{`}} Matchright software simulates reproduction to determine the likelihood of a child receiving a genetic disorder?
- ... that New Orleans blues / soul musician Rockie Charles was described as "The President of Soul"?
- ... that the community of Fruitvale, Tennessee, developed around a railroad switch?
=23 April 2014=
- 18:05, 23 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the 1843 Illustrated Treatise on the Maritime Kingdoms (pictured) is regarded as the first significant Chinese book on the West and had an important impact in Japan?
- ... that the success of Larry Wagner{{`s}} composition Whistler's Mother-in-Law led to a permanent rift between Paul Whiteman and himself?
- ... that the Masikryong Ski Resort in North Korea took only ten months to construct?
- ... that Louise Delamere decided to make her Holby City character Colette Sheward childless after reading a national statistic?
- ... that the Compromise of Nobles was drafted in the Sablon in Brussels, which would later be the site of the execution of 18 of its signatories?
- ... that baseball pitcher Seth Blair had a tumor in the joint of his middle finger on his throwing hand?
- 10:20, 23 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the actor Innocent is one of the candidates of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in this year's parliamentary election (election rally pictured)?
- ... that Irene Greif is a founder of computer-supported cooperative work?
- ... that the bro in "don't tase me, bro" is not the person being called a bro?
- ... that Derrick Gordon is the first NCAA Division I college basketball player to come out as gay?
- ... that Qiu Xigui{{`s}} book Chinese Writing is "universally acclaimed to be the definitive overview" of Chinese palaeography?
- ... that both the picarel and the blotched picarel start life as females but later change sex?
- 00:00, 23 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Catlow Valley (pictured) is a graben depression covering {{convert|1300|sqmi|km2}} between two fault block mountains, Hart Mountain and Steens Mountain, in southeastern Oregon?
- ... that Jamaican American jazz pianist and composer Wynton Kelly toured the Caribbean with an R&B band at age 15?
- ... that TerraCycle collects waste materials such as empty juice pouches which are then recycled or upcycled into new products?
- ... that writer/director Hal Hartley raised $395,292 to produce his upcoming film Ned Rifle by launching a Kickstarter campaign?
- ... that the Republic of Texas presented a formal proposal for annexation by the United States to President Martin Van Buren, who rejected it?
- ... that the tissues of the hidden anemone contain symbiotic single-celled algae?
=22 April 2014=
- 16:00, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that girls were first admitted to Norwich School (pictured) in 1994, marking the end of nearly 900 years of single-sex education at the school?
- ... that both the chairman and the senior vice chairman of the Jammu and Kashmir Awami League were killed in 2003?
- ... that actor Michael Thomson toured a hospital to help him prepare for his role as Jonny Maconie in Holby City?
- ... that Susan Stryker's book Transgender History discusses the Compton's Cafeteria riot and other transgender protests of the 1960s?
- ... that minigenes have been used to study isolated growth hormone deficiency?
- ... that Daisy Voog was the first woman to reach the summit of the Eiger via the mountain's north face?
- 08:00, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that top-scoring Singaporean footballer Aleksandar Đurić (pictured) represented Bosnia & Herzegovina in canoeing at the 1992 Summer Olympics?
- ... that geological activity on Venus is concentrated along its rift zones?
- ... that Makah chairman Edward Eugene Claplanhoo established the Makah Museum to house artifacts uncovered at the Ozette Indian Village Archeological Site?
- ... that The Psycho Ex-Wife, an anonymous blog, was shut down by a U.S. family court judge?
- ... that "Love Money Party" by Miley Cyrus was distinguished by a music journalist for highlighting her "more philosophical side"?
- ... that Marty Schmidt named his son Denali after the Alaskan mountain that he climbed 27 times?
- 00:00, 22 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Ada Hitchins{{`s}} measurements of atomic mass from uranium ores (pictured) provided the first experimental evidence for the existence of isotopes?
- ... that the first libraries on U.S. military bases were run by volunteers?
- ... that the Welsh climber Emmeline Lewis Lloyd, who made the first climb of Aiguille du Moine, retired in 1873?
- ... that cancer cells can die from paraptosis after treatment with certain anti-cancer substances?
- ... that Marty Haggard, a son of Merle Haggard, survived being shot by a hitchhiker while driving to a filming location for a TV movie?
- ... that Cambridge won the 2004 University Boat Race by six lengths after Oxford's bowman was unseated following a clash of blades?
=21 April 2014=
- 16:00, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Dayton Project (building pictured) produced radioactive polonium in a residential suburb in Ohio?
- ... that during the long nineteenth century, Belgium was ruled by Austria, rebels, France, and the Netherlands before gaining independence and itself ruling the Congo?
- ... that New Zealand actress Morgana O'Reilly had her husband film her first audition for a role on Neighbours in their garden?
- ... that the production of season 3 of House of Cards is being delayed and may be moved due to legislative decisions involving tax incentives?
- ... that in De kellner en de levenden (1949), Dutch author Simon Vestdijk presents a Last Judgment in the basement of a movie theater, with Satan sitting in judgment and a waiter as a Christ figure?
- ... that actor Keith Stanfield worked in a marijuana factory before appearing in his first feature film?
- 08:00, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Fay Fuller (pictured) was the first woman to climb Mount Rainier?
- ... that the 2008 surreal film Your Name Here, based on the life of author Philip K. Dick, was the feature film directorial debut of Matthew Wilder?
- ... that Holcim is one of the two largest cement manufacturers in the world?
- ... that the player-characters of Grand Theft Auto Online are designed by a genetics-related process?
- ... that chloride-bearing deposits on Mars appear as irregularly shaped fractures on the surface?
- 00:00, 21 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the church St. Patrokli, which has held the relics of its patron saint since 954, is known for its Tower of Westphalia (pictured)?
- ... that the hymn "Thine Be the Glory" is based on the resurrection of Jesus?
- ... that whilst the Khedut Sangh was the second-largest political force in the 1951 elections in Saurashtra State, it lacked prominent leaders?
- ... that the Santa Cruz – Chembur Link Road was called an "engineering marvel" by the National Geographic Society and the "world's most delayed road project" by the World Bank?
- ... that following the death of Rani Chandra in a plane crash, unfinished portions involving her in the 1976 Tamil film Bhadrakali were shot with a look-alike?
- ... that Franklin Pierce Adams did not think his 1910 poem, "Baseball's Sad Lexicon", was "much good"?
=20 April 2014=
- 16:00, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that 19th-century female climber Jeanne Immink (pictured) once wrote, "I challenge the male mountaineers to follow in my steps"?
- ... that the Karlovy Vary Region is responsible for more than half of the Czech Republic's spa industry?
- ... that Adolphus Jones has represented Saint Kitts and Nevis internationally in soccer, high jump, track running, and decathlon?
- ... that Marsha Canham was inspired to write In the Shadow of Midnight after discovering the story of the "lost princess of Brittany"?
- ... that Meghraj Tawar has contested every Lok Sabha election for the past three decades?
- ... that "Jesus Christ is Risen Today"?
- 08:15, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that Olympic rower Dr. Hugo Goeggel sold his award-winning collection of Brazilian Bull's Eyes (pictured) for over $1 million?
- ... that the Morris J. Berman oil spill was the first to take place in U.S. waters after the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 was passed?
- ... that after working on the Manhattan Project, Myrtle Bachelder went on to develop methods for the purification of the rare elements tellurium and indium?
- ... that Mr. Bean once sang "All Creatures of Our God and King"?
- ... that industrialist Robertson Stewart was the first to manufacture plastic in New Zealand?
- ... that a ladies' rest room is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places?
- 00:30, 20 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the 1911 American caricature of capitalism, IWW's Pyramid of Capitalist System (pictured), is based on a 1900 Russian work?
- ... that Claude Weston was effectively the first president of the New Zealand National Party?
- ... that the 1954 Series of Canadian banknotes were known as the "Devil's Head" series?
- ... that in 1849, Juraj Šporer published his tragedy on Skanderbeg and depicted him as the Slav who united all South Slavs from Istria to Krujë?
- ... that crew member Sarah Elizabeth Jones, who was killed on the set of Midnight Rider, received acknowledgement at the Oscars' ceremony?
- ... that Steelhouse Lane police station used to have its own bar?
=19 April 2014=
- 16:45, 19 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that impala (pictured) are known for their unique leaping ability, reaching heights up to {{convert|3|m}}?
- ... that soprano Kristīne Opolais made two Met Opera debuts, as Puccini's Cio-Cio-San and Mimi, within a day?
- ... that Maunsel House has been the family seat of the Slade baronets since 1772?
- ... that the episode "The 37's" was the first time in a Star Trek series that a Federation starship had landed on a planet's surface?
- ... that three men were convicted for using child soldiers in Sierra Leone during the civil war?
- ... that pointy ears are a common characteristic of numerous races in the fantasy genre?
- 09:00, 19 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that the Secrets of Rætikon (screenshot pictured) involve ancient machinery?
- ... that Stop Watching Us, a protest against mass surveillance, was supported by an EFF video featuring director Oliver Stone and actor John Cusack?
- ... that in 2011 there were 19,945 non-Status Indians living in Alberta?
- ... that Lyndon Johnson's biographer Robert Caro refused to meet Bryan Cranston, who plays Johnson in a new Broadway show, saying it might blur his image of the former president?
- ... that Dr. Agnes Bluhm wrote that the "female psyche" is predisposed towards working for "racial hygiene"?
- ... that the bikini bridge hoax was dubbed the new thigh gap?
- 01:15, 19 April 2014 (UTC)
- ... that in the St John Passion structure (first page pictured), the centre of symmetry is "Durch dein Gefängnis ...", expressing: "By your prison ... came our freedom"?
- ... that Charlotte Montagu Douglas Scott, Duchess of Buccleuch served as Mistress of the Robes to Queen Victoria from 1841 to 1846 after being selected for the post by Robert Peel?
- ... that according to the Vulgate translation of the New Testament, Pontius Pilate said "Quod scripsi, scripsi" to Jewish priests who objected to his description of Jesus as King of the Jews?
- ... that a European patent can only be granted jointly in respect of Switzerland and Liechtenstein, not for only one of these two countries?
- ... that the construction of the Deliktaş Tunnel, Turkey's longest railway tunnel, lasted almost four decades?
- ... that until the results from the Magellan mission, the impact crater Cleopatra Patera on Venus was believed to be a volcano?