This is a record of material that was recently featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know (DYK). Recently created new articles, greatly expanded former stub articles and recently promoted good articles are eligible; you can submit them for consideration.
Archives are generally grouped by month of Main Page appearance. (Currently, DYK hooks are archived according to the date and time that they were taken off the Main Page.) To find which archive contains the fact that appeared on Did you know, go to article's talk page and follow the archive link in the DYK talk page message box.
Edit the DYK archive navigation template
Please add the line ==={{subst:CURRENTDAY}} {{subst:CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{subst:CURRENTYEAR}}===
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.
- 18:00, 30 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the French Government issued a postage stamp (pictured) bringing attention to the theft of Cézanne's The Card Players in 1961?
- ... that a 17th-century Yemeni Orphans' Decree requiring the conversion of orphans to Islam was still being enforced as late as 1948?
- ... that Wilhelmine Reichard, the first German woman balloonist, fell unconscious at 7,800 metres (25,600 ft) during her third flight in 1811 and crash-landed in a forest?
- ... that on April 15, 2011, United States v. Scheinberg resulted in the end of online poker play for United States residents on the three online poker sites that account for approximately 95% of the market?
- ... that despite being told by doctors that he might never walk again, British swimmer Graham Edmunds has won two Paralympic gold medals in world record times?
- ... that as many as 6,400 human and animal illustrations, including Bir Hima Rock Petroglyphs and Inscriptions, have been recorded in Saudi Arabia's southwest Najran area?
- ... that Mormon bigamist Warren Jeffs spent a year in a prison called Purgatory?
- 12:00, 30 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 30 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 30 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 29 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 29 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 29 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 29 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 28 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 28 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Jaigarh Fort in Rajasthan, which was a center of artillery production, has the world's largest cannon on wheels, the Jaivana (pictured)?
- ... that in 1889, the Boston and Montana Consolidated Copper and Silver Mining Company agreed to build a smelter in Great Falls, Montana, if a local power company built a dam to supply it with power?
- ... that on his debut album, The Experiment, Dane Rumble found it difficult to write his former band's usual hip hop music, so he turned to pop rock?
- ... that Richard Waghorn was awarded the Air Force Cross after winning the 1929 Schneider Trophy seaplane race?
- ... that the extinct planthopper Tainosia quisqueyae was named for the Taíno people and Hispaniola?
- ... that when he made his major league debut, Chicago Cubs pitcher James Russell became the 97th former Texas Longhorn to play in the major leagues?
- ... that Theâtre de l'Étoile du Nord has been said to be "as boho as Tunis gets"?
- 06:00, 28 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the Australian creeping plant Commelina cyanea (pictured) is known as scurvy weed as early settlers ate it to ward off scurvy?
- ... that in 2007, the foundation headed by Guatemalan human rights activist Norma Cruz helped to convict over 30 individuals accused of murdering women?
- ... that despite having won all its round-robin matches, South Africa lost to India in the final of the Titan Cup?
- ... that African American artist Herman "Kofi" Bailey was the one-time artist-in-residence for Kwame Nkrumah, the first president of Ghana?
- ... that Walraversijde, the site of a reconstructed medieval fishing village, is the most studied archaeological site of its type in Europe?
- ... that Hal Stalmaster landed his role in Disney's 1957 film about the American Revolution, Johnny Tremain, without the help of his brother, casting director Lynn Stalmaster?
- ... that the Janet Smith case, the unsolved 1924 murder of a Scottish nursemaid in Vancouver, led to an attempt to make it illegal to employ Orientals and white women in the same household?
- 00:00, 28 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 27 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 27 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 27 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 27 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 26 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Christiane Ziegler excavated the Tomb of Akhethetep (pictured) from 1991 to 1999?
- ... that when Bach derived his third cantata for Easter of 1724, Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiß, BWV 134, from his secular cantata for New Year's Day, he just wrote new text under old text?
- ... that poet Jacqueline Berger compares the writing process to dreaming?
- ... that the Falkland Islands have on average only 2–3 hours of direct sunlight per day in winter and only 6 hours in summer?
- ... that "Heartaches," featuring Elmo Tanner's whistling, became a number 1 hit fourteen years after it was recorded?
- ... that Lagmann mac Gofraid, a late 11th-century King of Mann and the Isles, has been labelled as the only known Scot who took part in the First Crusade?
- ... that the upcoming 2012 film, Jack the Giant Killer (directed by Bryan Singer), is expected to take an adult look at the Jack and the Beanstalk legend?
- 12:00, 26 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 26 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 26 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that La Maison de la Magie Robert-Houdin (pictured) is the only public museum in Europe that combines collections of magic with a site for performing arts?
- ... that the opening chorus of Bach's cantata for the Second Day of Easter, Erfreut euch, ihr Herzen, BWV 66, has been termed "one of the longest and most exhilarating of Bach's early works"?
- ... that archaeologists believe they have uncovered the Monastery of the Virgins described in a 6th-century account of Byzantine Jerusalem?
- ... that four-time Winter Paralympic bronze medalist Matthew Stockford became the manager of Olympic skier Chemmy Alcott?
- ... that Wharton Reef Light, now on display at the Townsville Maritime Museum, Queensland, is the only survivor of a series of 20 automatic lighthouses installed from 1913 to the early 1920s?
- ... that author Andrew Morton's biography, Madonna, sold only half of its initial print run of 500,000 copies?
- ... that The Motherfucker With the Hat was the Broadway debut for actor Chris Rock?
- 12:00, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that more than 100 people died in the CTV Building (ruins pictured) in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake?
- ... that in Ghanian women's health, breast cancer is the leading malignancy, accounting for over 15% of all malignancies in Ghana?
- ... that Center Point, Camp County, Texas, was settled in 1865 by freed slaves after the Emancipation Proclamation, and is the birthplace of mezzo-soprano Barbara Smith Conrad?
- ... that the extinct trapdoor spiders Baltocteniza and Electrocteniza were both identified from specimens in Baltic amber?
- ... that a plaque on Phoenix Tower in Chester states that King Charles I stood on the tower in 1645 as he watched his soldiers being defeated at Rowton Moor?
- ... that Democratic and Republican plans for the 2012 United States federal budget both focus on deficit reduction, but differ in their changes to taxation, entitlement programs, and research funding?
- ... that the longest-running number one of the UK Dance Chart in 2005 was "Hung Up" by Madonna, which spent four weeks at the top of the chart?
- ... that Representative J. D. Rumberg of the 10th Arizona Territorial Legislature tried to ban all horse racing in the territory but was only able to have it outlawed on his own ranch?
- 00:00, 25 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Bach was only in his twenties when he composed the cantata Christ lag in Todes Banden, BWV 4, for Easter (pictured), using in seven movements the words and tune of Martin Luther's Easter chorale?
- ... that child actor Darryl Richard made his last TV appearance on the series finale of ABC's The Donna Reed Show, March 19, 1966, a day after his 20th birthday?
- ... that it is said that Thomas à Becket preached either in the church dedicated to him, in Capel, Kent, or in its churchyard?
- ... that Joseph Bloomfield Leake left the Iowa State Senate to serve in the American Civil War but was later elected back to the Senate?
- ... that St. Andrews Biological Station in New Brunswick is Canada's first marine biological research station?
- ... that Nelson F.C. lost only one home match in the Football League Third Division North during the 1924–25 season?
- ... that Geoff Emerick, who co-created the send tape echo echo delay audio effect at Abbey Road Studios, once said that "God only knows" how it worked?
- 12:00, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 24 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 23 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 23 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 23 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 23 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that according to Kawasaki's theorem, an origami crease pattern with one vertex may be folded flat (pictured) if and only if the sum of every other angle between consecutive creases is 180º?
- ... that the 6th Arizona Territorial Legislature was delayed from 1869 until 1871 because no Territorial Governor was available to call for elections?
- ... that the flash of light accompanying an earthquake in 1896 was attributed by some residents of North Piddle, Worcestershire, to a large meteor?
- ... that when the first cents coined by the U.S. Mint were ridiculed for their crudeness, Mint worker Adam Eckfeldt replaced the chain design with a wreath and put a trefoil under Liberty's head?
- ... that the medieval fortresses Lardea and Ktenia in modern southeastern Bulgaria were lost by the Second Bulgarian Empire to Byzantium in 1322 only to be recovered in 1324, then ceded back and once again recaptured in 1332?
- ... that Gandrung traditional dance, popular in Java, Bali and Lombok, was originally dedicated to the rice goddess, Dewi Sri?
- ... that Montana Supreme Court Justice Brian Morris, who clerked for U.S. Chief Justice William Rehnquist, was the starting fullback in the 1986 Gator Bowl for the Stanford Cardinal football team?
- 18:00, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Courtney Vandersloot (pictured) was the first NCAA Division I basketball player, male or female, with 2,000 points and 1,000 assists in a career?
- ... that the Livens Large Gallery Flame Projectors were large, 17 metres (56 ft) long, fixed flamethrowers used in the Mametz sector of the Battle of the Somme, and that the remains of one have recently been rediscovered?
- ... that Felix Schlag won the prize for designing the Jefferson nickel, but was required to submit an entirely new "tails" or reverse side?
- ... that when the ABB Group and CMS Energy invested US$1.5 billion into projects at the Moroccan port of Jorf Lasfar, it was the largest foreign investment ever in that country?
- ... that at age 18, Australian country music singer Samantha McClymont was crowned Grafton Jacaranda Queen, named Trans-Tasman Entertainer of the Year, and was a Top 118 finalist for Australian Idol?
- ... that the Carlton Hotel sold New Zealand's first beer on tap?
- ... that 17 years after Bruiser Brody's 1988 murder, the stadium where he was killed was one of the venues of the Bruiser Brody Memorial Cup Tour, which featured his assailant, Invader I, on the card?
- 00:00, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 21 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 21 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 21 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 21 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Piper's Opera House (pictured) was used by boxing champion Gentleman Jim Corbett as a training facility in preparation for his title bout with Bob Fitzsimmons?
- ... that Breton writer Jacques Cambry (1749–1807) published important works on Celtic history and monuments, and in 1805 founded the Celtic Academy?
- ... that the Late Eocene marine Hoko River Formation is noted for producing crab, gastropod, cephalopod, and wood fossils?
- ... that the monument to Sir Henry Furnese in All Saints Church, Waldershare, Kent, fills a chapel, and has been described as "outstanding"?
- ... that after Rick Wakeman left Yes without a full-time keyboardist in 1997, the band borrowed Toto keyboardist Steve Porcaro for their final rock radio hit "Open Your Eyes"?
- ... that the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck sought the imprisonment of Admiral Reinhold Werner, who nearly precipitated a war between Spanish rebels and Germany in 1873?
- ... that the oldest known museum labels are from c. 1900 BCE, describing 2000 BCE objects?
- 18:00, 20 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the Ethiopian eunuch (pictured) has been described as the "first baptized gay Christian"?
- ... that in the U.S. Supreme Court case Stoner v. California, Potter Stewart wrote that the police could not depend on their bud, a hotel clerk, to help smoke out a suspected robber?
- ... that Landysh, a Russian vessel built with funding from Japan to decommission nuclear submarines, was requested by Japan to assist in the aftermath of the Fukushima I nuclear accidents?
- ... that American ceramics sculptor Richard Deutsch had a piece exhibited at the Smithsonian Institution in 1981, just three years after his first solo show?
- ... that "G.I.R.L.F.R.E.N (You Know I've Got A)" by Everybody Was in the French Resistance...Now! is a reply to Avril Lavigne's song, "Girlfriend"?
- ... that Combretum glutinosum, found in The Gambia and the Sahel belt, is used to make yellow dye?
- ... that, after chopping off her husband's penis, Lorena Bobbitt won her trial by employing the abuse defense?
- 12:00, 20 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the concept of self-propelled particles can explain why flocking birds (pictured) suddenly change direction for no apparent reason, or abruptly switch from a flying state to a landing state?
- ... that in one concert, bassoonist Lyndon Watts premiered Bernd Redmann's Migrant, played Jörg Duda's first Finnish Quartet, which he had commissioned, and the Bassoon Quintet of Graham Waterhouse, which he had premiered?
- ... that the British minelayer HMS Plover laid over 15,000 mines during World War II, including two that sank the German destroyer Z8 Bruno Heinemann off the Belgian coast in January 1942?
- ... that John VI Kantakouzenos concealed the purpose of the meeting that resulted in the 1327 Byzantine–Bulgarian Treaty of Chernomen by describing it as eight days of rejoicing and feasts?
- ... that the Rome bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics will use 70 percent of the city's existing venues?
- ... that among the many children of Thomas Cochrane, 8th Earl of Dundonald were inventors, clergymen, civil servants, Members of Parliament, army officers and admirals?
- ... that German art nouveau painter and architect Richard Riemerschmid began designing furniture after he could not find what he wanted for his flat following his marriage?
- 06:00, 20 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 20 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Captain Charles Inglis (pictured) helped frustrate a planned French invasion of Britain?
- ... that artist Maya Lin worked with the U.S. Geological Survey to create her Bluespring Caverns-inspired sculpture Above and Below?
- ... that Lev Voronin, a First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers, was acting Premier of the Soviet Union between Nikolai Ryzhkov's hospitalisation and Valentin Pavlov's election as Premier?
- ... that the Lyceum Theatre in Crewe, Cheshire, was opened in 1887, destroyed by fire in 1910, and rebuilt on the same site in 1911?
- ... that Ernst Cadman Colwell, together with his students, elaborated a new method of textual criticism known as the Claremont Profile Method?
- ... that the album Gloria by Mexican singer Gloria Trevi features a song dedicated to The Rolling Stones?
- ... that the 2011 European Under-18 Rugby Union Championship, held in France in April 2011, marks the first time that all of the Six Nations will participate in the competition?
- 18:00, 19 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 19 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 19 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 19 April 2011 (UTC)
- 18:00, 18 April 2011 (UTC)
- 12:00, 18 April 2011 (UTC)
- 06:00, 18 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 18 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 17 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 17 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 17 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 16 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that three million trees, including pine, oak, sweet chestnut, and acacia (pictured), are being planted every year as part of reforestation efforts in Cape Verde?
- ... that Edward Litt Laman Blanchard, who later became a prominent writer for the Drury Lane pantomime, began writing for The Town when he was 17 years of age?
- ... that Epitaphium, composed for string trio by Graham Waterhouse, is performed today in Wigmore Hall in a memorial concert for his father, the bassoonist William Waterhouse?
- ... that the Natural Bridges National Monument Solar Power System in Utah was the world's largest solar cell power plant when it opened in 1980?
- ... that singer Jenny Silver debuted with the Swedish dance band Candela, when it was signed to Bert Karlsson's label Mariann Grammofon?
- ... that in the Indian state of Bihar, pressure from communist Party Unity guerrillas forced the upper-caste paramilitary Bhoomi Sena to surrender to the peasant organisation MKSS?
- ... that the Lincoln Thornton Manuscript, compiled around 1430-1440 by an amateur scribe and country gentleman, contains the only extant copies of Sir Degrevant and the Alliterative Morte Arthure?
- ... that Sir Peter Maxwell Davies’s new opera about student activism, Kommilitonen!, was intended to be performed by students?
- 08:00, 16 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 16 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Romania's Symbolist movement (iconography pictured) fostered the literary careers of far-right theorist Nae Ionescu, defrocked monk Tudor Arghezi, and Dada co-founder Tristan Tzara?
- ... that Ruislip Manor was largely undeveloped rural land at the turn of the 20th century until the arrival of the Metropolitan Railway in 1912?
- ... that during World War II, Germany and Japan wanted to divide all of Asia between each other along a line on the 70th meridian east longitude?
- ... that although described as one of the finest buildings in Glasgow, The Egyptian Halls may be demolished?
- ... that former Hillsboro, Oregon, mayor Harry T. Bagley worked to get a conviction overturned from a trial his brother George R. Bagley presided over?
- ... that Blackbutt, Christmas Bells, and Turpentine grow in the Garawarra State Conservation Area?
- ... that John Fenn, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, and his colleagues at Monsanto "practically bathed" in PCBs during the early 1940s?
- 08:00, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that coach Billy Gillispie once made Kentucky Wildcats center Josh Harrellson (pictured) sit in a bathroom stall during half-time of a game?
- ... that under the ongoing Russian police reform, the name of Russia's law enforcers was changed from "militia" to "police"?
- ... that Gyanvapi Mosque in Varanasi, India, built on the site of the original Kashi Vishwanath Temple, still shows evidence of the temple in its foundation, columns, and rear?
- ... that when Antoinette Sterling sang the English folk song "Three Fishers" in the late 1800s, she made the first verse "quite bright" so as not to give away the unhappy ending?
- ... that the Beaux Arts exterior of the 1907 Surrogate's Courthouse in New York features no fewer than 54 sculptures of historical and allegorical figures?
- ... that Namibian Hans Daniel Namuhuja was the first author to publish poetry in Oshindonga, a dialect of Oshiwambo?
- ... that soon after he was ordained, John Wesley preached in St Mary's Church in Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire?
- ... that as an unelected Congressional delegate from Jefferson Territory, George M. Willing claimed to have created the word "Idaho" as a name for Colorado?
- 00:00, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that James FitzGerald (pictured), the first editor of the Lyttelton Times, later founded its main competitor, The Press?
- ... that riparian forests contain some ⅓ of the estimated 3000 flora species in Benin?
- ... that the first Allied soldier killed during the Normandy landings was part of Operation Deadstick?
- ... that the Chapman Swifts, a flock of Vaux's Swift, inspired a Portland, Oregon, community to raise over US$60,000 for a new school heating system so the birds could have the old chimney to roost?
- ... that because it was too dark inside the Church of St Peter ad Vincula in Colemore, Hampshire, the parishioners petitioned the bishop in 1669 to have the south transept removed?
- ... that Decuriasuchus may be the first known archosaur to exhibit group behavior?
- ... that the Pistol River received its name after James Mace lost his pistol in it in 1853?
- 08:00, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 14 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the George Washington Masonic National Memorial (pictured) was proposed in 1852, began construction in 1922, dedicated in 1932, and finished in 1970?
- ... that pirate leader Emilio Changco operated out of Manila Bay till his arrest in the 1990s?
- ... that above the arcade in the chancel screen of St Mary's Church, Capel-le-Ferne in Kent is a large round-headed opening that is unique in England?
- ... that composer Jan Müller-Wieland called his first stage work, premiered at the Munich Biennale in 1992, a "Cabaret Farce for singers, pianists and percussionists"?
- ... that there is pressure to close the Fessenheim Nuclear Power Plant, the oldest in France, because of concerns over the risk of earthquakes?
- ... that the commander of the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, Captain Helmuth Brinkmann, was a classmate of the battleship Bismarck's commander Ernst Lindemann?
- ... that in Oregon's 1990 U.S. Senate election, incumbent Mark Hatfield's opponent in the Republican primary was best known for having spent 40 days tree sitting to protest old-growth logging?
- 16:00, 13 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 13 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that in Thailand, the smiling terrapin (pictured) is believed to contain the souls of people who died while trying to save others from drowning?
- ... that No. 1 Basic Flying Training School was formed in 1951 in response to the RAAF's increased demand for aircrew during the Korean War and Malayan Emergency?
- ... that the story of Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan, the topic of Sandeep Bhagwati's opera for the 1998 Munich Biennale, was considered fit for a film?
- ... that the two branches of New Zealand's Ashburton River flow in parallel less than 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) apart for 20 kilometres (12 mi) before they join?
- ... that the adjective "Polish-Lithuanian" refers to pre-nationalistic, multicultural inhabitants of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, unlike the modern understanding of the two nationalities?
- ... that R. E. Grant Govan, founder of Indian National Airways Ltd, also co-founded the Board of Control for Cricket in India and Cricket Club of India?
- ... that, according to legend, on the advice of Xenoclea, Hercules agreed to become a slave of the Queen of Lydia?
- 00:00, 13 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 12 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that The Man in the Moone, a 1638 book (frontispiece and title page pictured) by the English bishop Francis Godwin, is considered one of the first science fiction books?
- ... that Urbanus, the Grammy-nominated album by Stefon Harris, was recorded in the days leading up to Barack Obama's inauguration?
- ... that the Sierra Gorda region in central Mexico has more butterfly species than the United States and Canada combined?
- ... that Detlev Glanert's opera Caligula, after the play by Albert Camus on the cruel Roman emperor, was first staged at the Oper Frankfurt in 2006?
- ... that Rhodactis howesii, a sea anemone-like corallimorph, is eaten by the Samoans but can prove fatal if consumed raw?
- ... that the homemade Israeli mortar memorialized in Jerusalem's Davidka Square was totally inaccurate, but it made such a huge noise that it sent the enemy fleeing in panic?
- ... that the 15th-century Treatise of Love is based on the 13th-century monastic manual Ancrene Wisse, but shows considerably less interest in carnal love?
- 08:00, 12 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Princess Ennigaldi, daughter of the last Neo-Babylonian king Nabonidus, created the world's first museum (ruins pictured)?
- ... that during a career lasting almost fifty years at TV station WJXT in Jacksonville, Florida, George Winterling helped develop television weather forecasting?
- ... that traditionally, each season of cross country running in Italy concludes in March with Trofeo Alasport on the island of Sardinia?
- ... that goaltender Ben Scrivens signed with the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs organization mainly for the opportunity to work with goalie coach François Allaire?
- ... that Perry Como's musical arranger, Nick Perito, also helped Bob Hope's wife, Dolores, revive her singing career after 60 years?
- ... that in Jalpan de Serra in Querétaro, Mexico, there is an annual festival to celebrate "countrymen" visiting from the United States?
- ... that the North American Star League, a professional e-sports league for players of the video game StarCraft II, will award US$100,000 to the winner of its inaugural season?
- 00:00, 12 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that the Franciscan Missions in the Sierra Gorda (example pictured) in Querétaro, Mexico, have been classified as "mestizo architecture" because of the mixture of European and indigenous influences?
- ... that Rear-Admiral Horatio Nelson wrote a personal letter to Lieutenant Charles Inglis congratulating him for his part in the action of 31 March 1800?
- ... that on July 28, 2006, Daytona Cubs baseball player Ryan Harvey set a Florida State League record by hitting four home runs in a game against the Clearwater Threshers?
- ... that Frank Searle designed the X-type and B-type bus, and was the Managing Director of Daimler Airway and Imperial Airways?
- ... that the Großgaststätte Ahornblatt, a concrete building in the shape of a maple leaf in former East Berlin, was built in 1973 and demolished in 2000?
- ... that Pele's hair, and Pele's tears are well preserved at Devastation Trail after the 1959 eruption of Kīlauea Iki crater?
- ... that 19th-century English artist John Carter learned to draw, paint and write with his mouth, after a fall from a tree left him paralysed below the neck?
- 16:00, 11 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 11 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 11 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 10 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 10 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that although the nuclear policy of the United States regulates the nuclear energy industry more strictly than most others, there have been 52 incidents (Three Mile Island cleanup pictured) costing an estimated $8.56 billion?
- ... that just one day after arrest, Lithuanian partisan commander Adolfas Ramanauskas was transferred to a hospital in a critical condition with a punctured eye and missing testicles?
- ... that the decorative, "humpbacked" Chamberlain Bridge in Barbados, named after British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain, replaced an older bridge destroyed by the Great Hurricane of 1898?
- ... that George Johnstone was a Royal Navy officer, an MP, a director of the East India Company, a member of the Carlisle Peace Commission and the first Governor of West Florida?
- ... that Marino Murillo, the former Minister of Economy and Planning of Cuba, believes the Cuban economic system is too paternalistic and supports the creation of a small-scale private market?
- ... that the unauthorized use of data from the National Register of Electors, the permanent database of eligible Canadian voters, can carry a penalty of a year in prison?
- ... that Acid-Fest, a professional wrestling memorial show for Trent Acid, featured one of the largest battle royals ever held?
- 00:00, 10 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that trolleybuses in Derby (example pictured) last operated in 1967, but there are still five preserved by collectors?
- ... that Gent Strazimiri, who began his career as an anti-communist activist, is now a member of the Albanian parliament for the Democratic Party of Albania?
- ... that the influential 2000 oncology paper "The Hallmarks of Cancer" identified six features that all cancers have in common?
- ... that Reverend Heinrich Schmelen, a German missionary in South-West Africa, married an indigenous Nama woman in 1814, an action encouraged by the missionary societies of that time?
- ... that the 1965 Pacific hurricane season had 10 named storms, with one storm becoming a hurricane?
- ... that Jayden Pitt, the lightest player on the Fremantle Football Club playing list at only 70 kg (150 lb), was a surprise selection when he made his début in the opening round of the 2011 AFL season?
- ... that John T. Cunningham, who has chronicled much of New Jersey's past, once said, "My goals did not include either the writing of books or becoming a historian"?
- 08:00, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that Hensley Settlement in Kentucky (school pictured) is an Appalachian living history museum?
- ... that the convoy, a group of merchantmen or troopships travelling together with a naval escort, was revived during World War I?
- ... that Danny Goodwin, the Chicago White Sox first-round draft pick and first overall pick in 1971, decided not to sign with the team?
- ... that St Mary's Church, in Sandwich, Kent, was damaged by the French in 1217 and again in 1457, and by an earthquake in 1578?
- ... that H. S. Lloyd is the most successful dog breeder in Crufts history, winning Best in Show on six occasions?
- ... that Albert Bandura's 1986 book Social Foundations of Thought and Action was said to contain "outlines of the grand theory" of human behaviour psychologists were seeking for over a century?
- ... that Dead Women Crossing in Oklahoma is reputedly haunted by a schoolteacher who disappeared the day after she filed for divorce in 1905, and was found murdered two months later?
- 00:00, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that some whales "lunge feed" on bait balls (pictured), an extreme method of feeding which has been called the largest biomechanical event on Earth?
- ... that former Kennel Club Chairman Leonard Pagliero flew supplies to the Norwegian resistance movement during World War II?
- ... that the Task Force on Childhood Obesity, established by the Obama Administration in 2010, seeks to eliminate childhood obesity in the United States within a generation?
- ... that The inSpiral Lounge is a vegetarian restaurant, organic bar and live music venue in Camden Lock, London that hosts performances of acoustic and electronic music?
- ... that Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, by Timothy D. Snyder, discusses the estimated 14 million deaths that occurred in Eastern Europe between 1933 and 1945?
- ... that The Washington Post named Libyan female lawyer Iman al-Obeidi, who accused Muammar Gaddafi's troops of politically motivated rape, a "symbol of defiance against Gaddafi"?
- ... that the Major League Baseball career of Larry McLean ended at the Buckingham Hotel in St. Louis, Missouri, during a drunken encounter with his manager, John McGraw?
- 16:00, 8 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that during a raid on Berlin in 1944, RAAF Squadron Leader Bill Brill's (pictured) Avro Lancaster was struck by incendiary bombs dropped by another Allied aircraft above him?
- ... that Anesrif is managing the construction of the High Plateau line, a railway across Algeria?
- ... that Tim Tebow, Maya Moore and Matt Bonner were two-time team members of the Year in American football, women's basketball, and men's basketball, respectively?
- ... that Mehadia, Romania, is located on the site of the ancient Roman colony Ad Mediam, noted for its Hercules baths?
- ... that before the Hershey–Chase experiment confirmed the role of DNA, scientists believed that genes were carried by proteins?
- ... that French marshal Victor-Perrin, on his way to command the Siege of Kolberg (1807), was captured by a Prussian freikorps?
- ... that Trey Songz' 2011 single "Love Faces" is a mid-tempo piano-based ballad that discusses facial expressions that people make when having sexual intercourse?
- 08:00, 8 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 8 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that at the height of battle the wolf's head of the Dacian Draco (pictured), with its several metal tongues, made a shrill sound and its strips of material waved in the wind?
- ... that Paul Signac praised Charles Angrand's drawings as "masterpieces", calling them "poems of light"?
- ... that in the churchyard of All Saints Church, in Little Somborne, Hampshire, is the grave of Thomas Sopwith, the pioneer aviator?
- ... that Hans Stadlmair, conductor of the Münchener Kammerorchester for almost four decades, in 1971 premiered Wilhelm Killmayer's Fin al punto, of which the composer said, "The calm already contains the catastrophe"?
- ... that despite being set up similarly, government-sponsored fixed markets never replaced "tianguis" or open air markets in Mexico?
- ... that in 1918 Morris S. Halliday, a New York State Senator for the forty-first Senate District, resigned his seat to enter the United States Army Air Service?
- ... that a parrot was branded sectarian after being heard whistling "Follow Follow"?
- 16:00, 7 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 7 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 7 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 6 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 6 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 6 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 5 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 5 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 5 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 4 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 4 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 4 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 3 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 3 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 3 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 2 April 2011 (UTC)
- ... that, in 1960, Volkmar Wentzel photographed Capt. Joseph Kittinger making a record-setting 102,800-foot (31,300 m) skydive (pictured)?
- ... that, even though the Valle d'Aosta is surrounded by the Alps in the far northwest region of Italy, nearly 90% of its wines are red and rosé made from varieties like Petit Rouge?
- ... that the titular character of the 15th-century romance Sir Degrevant was called the "perfect romance hero" precisely because he was untouched by love?
- ... that the larva of the Texas beetle, Brachypsectra fulva, can live for over two years without feeding?
- ... that Charles Edward Roehenstart was the natural son of a Catholic archbishop and a duchess?
- ... that Revlon named a fragrance "Charlie" after the company's founder, because competitor Estée Lauder released one called "Estée"?
- ... that, after leaving UCLA and the University of Georgia, basketball player Nicole Kaczmarski started waiting tables at Outback Steakhouse?
- 08:00, 2 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 2 April 2011 (UTC)
- 16:00, 1 April 2011 (UTC)
- 08:00, 1 April 2011 (UTC)
- 00:00, 1 April 2011 (UTC)