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Nature Facts

759 facts in Nature. Click any fact to see its full page.

All 11,491 📜 History 1,991 🔬 Science 1,964 🐾 Animals 1,525 🚀 Space 977 🧠 Psychology 893 🌿 Nature 759 💻 Technology 735 🌍 Geography 599 🎭 Culture 581 🫀 Human Body 572 🌊 Ocean 373 💬 Language 245 🍕 Food 199 ✨ General 68 ✨ Dinosaur 10
Tardigrades can survive in space, in boiling water, and in the vacuum of outer space.
🌿 Nature Fact #11476
Honey never spoils — archaeologists have found edible honey in 3,000-year-old Egyptian tombs.
🌿 Nature Fact #11473
Mammatus clouds, which look like pouches hanging from the sky, often form on the underside of severe thunderstorm anvils.
🌿 Nature Fact #11406
Virga is rain that evaporates before reaching the ground, creating ghostly streaks visible beneath clouds.
🌿 Nature Fact #11404
St. Elmo's fire is a weather phenomenon where a luminous plasma appears on pointed objects during thunderstorms.
🌿 Nature Fact #11402
A derecho is a widespread, long-lived windstorm associated with a band of rapidly moving showers and thunderstorms.
🌿 Nature Fact #11401
The driest place on Earth, the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica, has not seen rain for approximately 2 million years.
🌿 Nature Fact #11398
Microbursts are sudden downdrafts of air that can produce winds exceeding 100 miles per hour and last only a few minutes.
🌿 Nature Fact #11397
The jet stream is a band of fast-moving air at high altitudes that can reach speeds of over 200 miles per hour.
🌿 Nature Fact #11396
Waterspouts are tornadoes that form over water and can lift fish and frogs into the air, causing them to rain down on land.
🌿 Nature Fact #11395
Dust from the Sahara Desert regularly crosses the Atlantic Ocean and fertilizes the Amazon Rainforest.
🌿 Nature Fact #11393
Hailstones can reach the size of softballs and fall at speeds over 100 miles per hour.
🌿 Nature Fact #11392
Fog is essentially a cloud that touches the ground.
🌿 Nature Fact #11391
Cone snails have a venomous harpoon-like tooth that can kill a human, but compounds from their venom are used to make painkillers.
🌿 Nature Fact #11381
The chambered nautilus has remained virtually unchanged for over 500 million years.
🌿 Nature Fact #11375
Forest bathing, or shinrin-yoku, has been scientifically shown to reduce cortisol levels and improve immune function.
🌿 Nature Fact #11362
Fireflies produce light through a chemical reaction called bioluminescence with nearly 100% efficiency — almost no energy is wasted as heat.
🌿 Nature Fact #11323
A single queen termite can lay up to 30,000 eggs per day.
🌿 Nature Fact #11321
Walking sticks are so well camouflaged that some species even sway back and forth to mimic a twig moving in the wind.
🌿 Nature Fact #11320
Termites have been building mounds for over 30 million years, and some active mounds are over 4,000 years old.
🌿 Nature Fact #11318
Monarch butterflies migrate up to 3,000 miles from Canada to Mexico every autumn, a journey no single butterfly completes twice.
🌿 Nature Fact #11308
Mosquitoes are attracted to people who have recently eaten bananas.
🌿 Nature Fact #11305
A single bee colony can pollinate 300 million flowers each day.
🌿 Nature Fact #11303
Bananas are curved because they grow toward the Sun.
🌿 Nature Fact #11243
Honey never spoils — archaeologists have found 3,000-year-old honey in Egyptian tombs that was still edible.
🌿 Nature Fact #11240
The average cloud weighs about 1.1 million pounds.
🌿 Nature Fact #11236
Cave-dwelling organisms called troglobites have evolved to lose their eyes and pigmentation over millions of years.
🌿 Nature Fact #11226
Permafrost in Siberia contains ancient viruses and bacteria that are being released as the ground thaws due to climate change.
🌿 Nature Fact #11225
Blood Falls in Antarctica flows a deep red color from iron-rich saltwater that has been trapped beneath a glacier for 2 million years.
🌿 Nature Fact #11223
Lake Mono in California is three times saltier than the ocean and supports brine shrimp and alkali flies that exist nowhere else.
🌿 Nature Fact #11220
Yellowstone's Grand Prismatic Spring gets its vivid colors from heat-loving microorganisms called thermophiles.
🌿 Nature Fact #11216
Bacteria have been found living in rocks 1.5 miles below the Earth's surface, surviving on hydrogen gas and chemical reactions.
🌿 Nature Fact #11213
Extremophile organisms have been found living in boiling hot springs, frozen Antarctic ice, and even inside nuclear reactors.
🌿 Nature Fact #11209
The Fibonacci sequence appears throughout nature in the arrangement of leaves, petals, pinecones, and shells.
🌿 Nature Fact #11076
The world's largest snowflake ever recorded was 15 inches wide and 8 inches thick, observed in Montana in 1887.
🌿 Nature Fact #11066
There are more than 24,000 known species of orchids, making them one of the largest flowering plant families.
🌿 Nature Fact #11019
Sprites are large-scale electrical discharges that occur above thunderstorms, appearing as brief flashes of red light.
🌿 Nature Fact #11005
The Zhangye Danxia landform in China features mountains with dramatic stripes of red, orange, and yellow caused by mineral deposits.
🌿 Nature Fact #11004
Frost flowers are thin ice crystals that form on thin sea ice and can cover large areas in delicate white formations.
🌿 Nature Fact #11003
The Waitomo Glowworm Caves in New Zealand are illuminated by thousands of bioluminescent glowworms.
🌿 Nature Fact #11001
Snow rollers are rare cylindrical snowballs formed naturally by wind blowing snow across flat terrain.
🌿 Nature Fact #11000
Morning glory clouds are rare tube-shaped clouds that can stretch up to 600 miles and roll across the sky.
🌿 Nature Fact #10998
Sailing stones in Death Valley appear to move across the desert floor on their own, propelled by thin sheets of ice.
🌿 Nature Fact #10995
The Spotted Lake in British Columbia evaporates in summer to reveal colorful mineral pools.
🌿 Nature Fact #10992
Bioluminescent bays glow bright blue at night when microorganisms called dinoflagellates are disturbed by movement.
🌿 Nature Fact #10991
The Dragon Blood Tree of Socotra Island produces red sap and looks like it belongs on an alien planet.
🌿 Nature Fact #10990
The Catatumbo Lightning in Venezuela produces lightning nearly 300 nights per year at the mouth of the Catatumbo River.
🌿 Nature Fact #10989
Lenticular clouds form over mountains and look so much like flying saucers that they are often mistaken for UFOs.
🌿 Nature Fact #10988
The Great Basin bristlecone pine is one of the oldest known non-clonal organisms, with some individuals exceeding 5,000 years in age.
🌿 Nature Fact #10987
Frozen methane bubbles trapped under Abraham Lake in Canada create an otherworldly landscape.
🌿 Nature Fact #10986