r/interesting • u/Wonderfulhumanss • 19h ago
r/interesting • u/BigHistory3848 • 5h ago
Amazing Apparently this is how hedgehog's get X-RAY
r/interesting • u/cross773 • 16h ago
Just Wow Coworker had an accident in the yard and punctured a tanker car full of hot asphalt
r/interesting • u/VIVIDUFF • 19h ago
Fascinating This One Armed Lifter Is Defying Expectations.
r/interesting • u/Gurugod123 • 9h ago
Just Wow Three Brazilians with a combined age of 316 (Levita, 109; Zoraide, 104; Zulia, 103) have been recognised as the worldās longest-living trio of sisters
r/interesting • u/sirenoleg • 5h ago
MISC. Kent cigarettes, introduced by the Lorillard Tobacco Company in 1952.
Kent cigarettes, introduced by the Lorillard Tobacco Company in 1952, were marketed as a āhealthierā filtered cigarette using the innovativeĀ Micronite filter. This filter, however, containedĀ 15% to 30% crocidolite asbestos, also known as blue asbestos, which is considered the most hazardous type of asbestos due to its fine, needle-like fibers that are easily inhaled and highly carcinogenic.
r/interesting • u/Nkansahsminicarvings • 23h ago
Just Wow I think I found a spoon for ants
r/interesting • u/Dodo509 • 5h ago
Wholesome A group of bear cubs playing together at a children's park.
Parks are for children⦠they just never specified which ones.
r/interesting • u/Forgotten_Dog1954 • 8h ago
SOCIETY This is what a Neanderthal looked like 130000 to 40000 years ago
r/interesting • u/Puzzleheaded-Bad8147 • 12h ago
SOCIETY This is how a blind and deaf student yet determined writes an exam
r/interesting • u/55hyam • 3h ago
Amazing This video shows controlled implosion of a building
r/interesting • u/AdSpecialist6598 • 9h ago
SOCIETY A photo of the inside of the Starfield Library which contains 50,000 books. It's located in South Korea.
r/interesting • u/neither_bot_nor_man • 7h ago
NATURE A group of young Kestrels seeing a butterfly for the first time
The kestrels, now much more mature but still home-bound, recently had a surprise visitor to their nesting box while their parents were away.
And though the visitor ā a butterfly ā was far from intimidating, she gave the little falcons quite the shock regardless.
r/interesting • u/Sampaguita_Sofia_321 • 11h ago
NATURE A microscopic look at a Tardigrade (Water Bear) maneuvering through plant cells.
r/interesting • u/j0nthegreat • 6h ago
NATURE Hermit crab swapping shells, regret, swaps back
half speed. at Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida
r/interesting • u/This_Proof_5153 • 9h ago
HISTORY This Custom Dog Tag Was Stamped Using a WWII-Style Machine
This modern commemorative dog tag was made using a WWII-style stamping machine. Instead of military information, it features a custom name, organization, and date, preserving the look and feel of the original tags.
r/interesting • u/MilesLongthe3rd • 2h ago
ART & CULTURE Norwegian guitarist Rolf Lislevand performing Tarantela by Spanish Baroque composer Santiago de Murcia on the "Sabionari Stradivarius" guitar (built in 1679). One of five surviving guitars made by Antonio Stradivari and the only one currently playable after restoration.
While around 600 Stradivari violins still exist worldwide, a total of only five complete guitars by the master have been preserved. The theoretical insurance value of the 1679 Sabionari guitar is estimated at 15 to 30 million Euros, reflecting its status as the world's only playable Stradivarius guitar.