That's Interesting

  • Listening to Music May Speed Up Recovery from Surgery

    Review of studies shows powerful effects of music in reducing perceived pain and heart rate immediately after surgery

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  • Death | Open Yale Courses

    This course examines a number of issues that arise once we begin to reflect on our mortality. The possibility that death may not actually be the end is considered. Also a clearer notion of what it is to die is examined. And, finally, different attitudes to death are evaluated.

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  • BBC Sound Effects

    The BBC Sound Effects Archive is available for personal, educational or research purposes. There are over 33,000 clips from across the world from the past 100 years. These include clips made by the BBC Radiophonic workshop, recordings from the Blitz in London, special effects made for BBC TV and Radio productions, as well as 15,000 recordings from the Natural History Unit archive. You can explore sounds from every continent – from the college bells ringing in Oxford to a Patagonian waterfall – or listen to a submarine klaxon or the sound of a 1969 Ford Cortina door slamming shut.

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  • Millions of butterflies stop in these Mexico sanctuaries. Here’s how to see them.

    In one of the planet’s most extraordinary natural spectacles, millions of monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) gather every winter amid the fir forests of Central Mexico. They carpet the trees and paint the sky black and orange. In Mesoamerican culture, they personify the souls of departed loved ones.

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  • How the Continual Movement of Wildlife Regulates the Natural World

    Each night, as the line that separates day from night sweeps across the face of the ocean, a vast wave of life rises from the ocean’s depths behind it. Made up of an astonishing diversity of animals, this world-spanning tide travels surfaceward to feed in the safety of the dark, before retreating to the depths again at dawn.

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  • Introducing peanut in infancy prevents peanut allergy into adolescence

    Feeding children peanut products regularly from infancy to age 5 years reduced the rate of peanut allergy in adolescence by 71%, even when the children ate or avoided peanut products as desired for many years. These new findings, from a study sponsored and co-funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), provide conclusive evidence that achieving long-term prevention of peanut allergy is possible through early allergen consumption.

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  • Why We Tell Bees About Death

    The connection between apiarists and funeral rites stretches back centuries.

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  • A World Tour of Abandoned Amusement Parks

    There aren’t many places in the world that invoke pure joy like a theme park or amusement park—the rides, the food, the decor. But they don’t last forever. In many places both fun and funds run dry, leaving behind a unique kind of abandoned space, where you can almost hear the laughter and the screams in an uninhabited ruin.

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  • Betting on the Lives of Strangers: Life Settlements, Stoli & Securitization

    Life insurance serves the important purpose of providing a means for families and businesses to survive the premature death of a person whose support they require to maintain themselves. Over time, life insurance has become a much more sophisticated financial product incorporating savings plans, mutual fund investments, and securitizations. This article recounts the history of life insurance including the development of the insurable interest doctrine.

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  • Methuselah: Still the world’s oldest tree?

    In eastern California, a Great Basin bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva) known as Methuselah has long been considered Earth’s oldest living thing. According to tree-ring data, Methuselah is 4,853 years old — meaning it was well established by the time ancient Egyptians built the pyramids at Giza. And while Methuselah’s precise location is kept under wraps to protect it from harm, there’s much we do know about this living relic.

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