Jump to content

List of common misconceptions: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Astronomy: cl.removed unsourced examples (i.e. not sourced that they are common misconceptions)
Abd (talk | contribs)
→‎Computing: clean up syntax, and we don't need to source simple facts for objects we have articles on. Presumably those articles have sources. If not, that's where the fix or tags should be!
Line 215: Line 215:


===Computing===
===Computing===
* [[ENIAC]] was not the first ''digital'' computer; rather, it was the first ''general-purpose all-electronic'' computer. The [[Atanasoff-Berry Computer]] (ABC) was the first digital electronic binary computer (link to court paper to be added). The partly-electromechanical [[Z3 (computer)|Z3]] was also among the earliest digital and general-purpose computers. The [[Colossus computer]] was invented about the same time with ABC but was not general-purpose, being designed for only particular applications.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} <ref>Jack Copeland, ''Colossus and the Dawning of the Computer Age'', in {{cite book | last = Smith | first = Michael | authorlink = | coauthors = Ralph Erskine | title = Action This Day | publisher = Bantam | date = 2002 | location = | nopp = | page = | url = | isbn = 0593049829 }}</ref>
* [[ENIAC]], (1947), was not the first ''digital'' computer; rather, it was the first ''general-purpose all-electronic'' computer. The [[Atanasoff-Berry Computer]] (ABC) (1942), was the first digital electronic binary computer.<ref>[[Honeywell v. Sperry-Rand]]</ref> The partly-electromechanical [[Z3 (computer)|Z3]] (1941), was also among the earliest digital and general-purpose computers. The first [[Colossus computer]] (1943), but was not general-purpose, being designed only for particular applications. <ref>Jack Copeland, ''Colossus and the Dawning of the Computer Age'', in {{cite book | last = Smith | first = Michael | authorlink = | coauthors = Ralph Erskine | title = Action This Day | publisher = Bantam | date = 2002 | location = | nopp = | page = | url = | isbn = 0593049829 }}</ref>
* The clock rate of a CPU is not a good measure of its performance. [[Computer performance]] is affected by many things, especially the design of the CPU's [[instruction pipeline]]s, [[branch prediction]], [[computer memory|memory subsystem]], and [[CPU cache|cache]]s; the number of [[processor core|cores]]; and the ability of software to take advantage of a given [[CPU architecture]]'s features. This is known as the [[megahertz myth]], and was largely driven by marketing considerations.<ref>{{cite book | last = Warford | first = J. Stanley | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Computer Systems | publisher = Jones & Bartlett | date = 2005 | location = | nopp = | page = 647 | url = | isbn = 0763732397 }}</ref><ref>http://www.forbes.com/global/1999/1227/061_01.html</ref><ref>http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2001/01/08/BU137328.DTL</ref>
* The clock rate of a CPU is not a good measure of its performance. [[Computer performance]] is affected by many things, especially the design of the CPU's [[instruction pipeline]]s, [[branch prediction]], [[computer memory|memory subsystem]], and [[CPU cache|cache]]s; the number of [[processor core|cores]]; and the ability of software to take advantage of a given [[CPU architecture]]'s features. This is known as the [[megahertz myth]], and was largely driven by marketing considerations.<ref>{{cite book | last = Warford | first = J. Stanley | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Computer Systems | publisher = Jones & Bartlett | date = 2005 | location = | nopp = | page = 647 | url = | isbn = 0763732397 }}</ref><ref>http://www.forbes.com/global/1999/1227/061_01.html</ref><ref>http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2001/01/08/BU137328.DTL</ref>



Revision as of 21:12, 31 March 2009

This list of common or popular misconceptions details various ideas described by multiple reliable sources as widely held, but which are false, misleading or otherwise flawed.[1]

History

The Americas

  • Christopher Columbus's efforts to obtain support for his voyages were not hampered by a European belief in a flat Earth.[2] In fact, sailors and navigators of the time knew that the Earth was spherical, but (correctly) disagreed with Columbus' estimates of the distance to India (see Flat Earth). If the Americas did not exist, and Columbus had continued to India (even putting aside the threat of mutiny he was under), he would have run out of supplies before reaching it at the rate he was traveling. The intellectual class had known that the earth was spherical since Ancient Greece.[3]
  • Paul Revere was not the only American colonist who rode to warn the Minute Men of the British before the battle of Lexington and Concord of the American Revolutionary War. The story of Paul Revere is largely based on the poem "Paul Revere's Ride", written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1860 (see Paul Revere's Ride).[4]
  • George Washington did not have wooden teeth. According to a study of Washington's four known dentures performed by a forensic anthropologist from the University of Pittsburgh (in collaboration with the National Museum of Dentistry, itself associated with the Smithsonian Museum), the dentures were made of gold, hippopotamus ivory, lead, human and animal teeth (including horse and donkey teeth).[5]
  • Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation did not immediately free all American slaves, just those in the rebelling area (i.e. most of the South). Since that area did not recognize the power of the Federal government, few slaves were freed as a result of the Proclamation.[6] Regions in the South that were under Union control when the Emancipation Proclamation was issued were not affected by it. These regions were: Tennessee, southern Louisiana, and parts of Virginia.[7] The Thirteenth Amendment officially abolished slavery in all of the United States.
  • The Pilgrims did not dress only in black, nor did they have buckles on their hats or shoes.[8]
  • Cinco de Mayo (May 5) is not Mexico's Independence Day. It is a regional holiday primarily celebrated in the state of Puebla, and commemorates the Mexican victory over the French in the Battle of Puebla.[9] Mexico's Independence Day is on September 16.[10]
  • U.S. president William Henry Harrison did give a three-hour inauguration speech on March 4, 1841, with his jacket off during a wintry day, but he did not catch pneumonia or a cold that day. The pneumonia-like symptoms that eventually killed him April 4 began March 26, three weeks after his speech.

Europe

Painting of Napoleon Bonaparte, who was taller than his nickname may suggest
  • Napoleon Bonaparte (pictured) was not especially short. After his death in 1821, the French emperor's height was recorded as 5 feet 2 inches in French feet. This corresponds to 5 feet 6.5 inches in modern international feet, or 1.686 metres,[11] making him slightly taller than an average Frenchman of the 19th century.[12] The metric system was introduced during his lifetime, so it was natural that he would be measured in feet and inches for much of his life. His nickname, "le petit caporal." There are competing explanations for why he was called this, but few modern scholars believe it referred to his stature. [13]
  • Italian dictator Benito Mussolini did not make the trains run on time. Much of the repair work had been performed before Mussolini and the Fascists came to power in 1922. Accounts from the era also suggest that the Italian railways' legendary adherence to timetables was more myth than reality.[14]
  • Common misconceptions about vikings: Vikings wore helmets, but not the horned helmets often depicted in media (Viking Helmet from Gjermundbu); horned helmets were used in Celtic religious rituals, but are unsuited for combat, the horns easily catching on weapons – the imagery of horned vikings is believed to come from 19th century Scandinavism romantic nationalist movement. Nor did they drink from skull cups.[15]
  • Queen Marie Antoinette never said "Let them eat cake!" The phrase is first found in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Confessions, of 1770, when Marie-Antoinette was fourteen (prior to marriage or revolution). Countess Madame de Boigne recalls in her memoirs that Madame Victoire was a woman of "very little wit and extreme kindness. It was she who said, her eyes full of tears, in a time of famine when one spoke of the suffering of the unfortunates who lacked bread: But, my God, if they would only resign themselves to eating paté crust!"[citation needed]

Politics

  • Although many young people in the 1960s were actively opposed to the Vietnam war, evidence from opinion polling in the United States showed consistently that younger people were more likely to support sending US troops to Vietnam than were older people. A Gallup poll in March 1966 found that 21% of Americans in their 20s thought the US made a mistake sending troops, which rose to 30% of those over 50. Four years later the percentages had risen to 49% of those in their 20s (a statistical dead heat with supporters), but 61% of those over 50 (a clear majority regarding the war as a mistake).[16]
  • Al Gore never said he invented the Internet, though he did state that "During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet"(emphasis added).[17] Gore was the original drafter of the High Performance Computing Act of 1991, which provided significant funding for supercomputing centers, and this in turn led to upgrades of the Internet's precursor, the NSFNet, and development of NCSA Mosaic, the browser that popularized the World Wide Web.

Cooking

  • Searing meat does not "seal in" moisture, and in fact may actually cause meat to lose moisture. Rather, meat is seared to create a brown crust and to add a rich flavor via the Maillard reaction.[18][19]
  • Mussels that do not open when cooked can still be fully cooked and safe to eat.[20]
  • All true teas, including black, green, and white teas, come from the Camellia sinensis plant, but herbal teas with no relation to the tea plant, such as those made from chamomile, peppermint, or rooibos, can also be referred to as "tea".[21] Sometimes it is claimed that there is a common misconception to the effect that herbal teas contain tea in the strict sense of the word.[22][23][24][dubiousdiscuss]
  • Some cooks believe alcohol evaporates quickly when heated. However, it takes 3 hours or longer to dissipate or 'burn off' all the alcohol.[25]
  • It is a common misconception that Sushi is raw fish.[26][27] In fact, the proper Japanese term for that would be sashimi. The term "sushi" actually refers to the way the rice is prepared with a vinegared dressing.[28] Toppings for the rice may traditionally include raw fish but also cooked seafood or vegetarian toppings.

Law

  • Entrapment law in the United States does not forbid police officers from going undercover, or from denying that they are police. It is a common misconception[where?] among persons engaged in low-level crime that if an undercover police officer is asked, "Are you a cop?" that they must reveal themselves to avoid entrapment.[29][30]

Science

Astronomy

A satellite image of a section of the Great Wall of China, running diagonally from lower left to upper right.
  • It is commonly claimed[31] that the Great Wall of China is the only man-made object visible from the Moon. This is false. None of the Apollo astronauts reported seeing any man-made object from the Moon. The misconception is believed to have been popularized by Richard Halliburton decades before the first moon landing.[32] (See Great Wall's visibility from space.)
  • There is no dark side of the Moon; every part of the Moon's surface (except perhaps deep craters near the poles) is illuminated by the Sun roughly half of the time. The phrase uses the word "dark" in the less-frequent sense of "unknown" or "obscure" to refer to the far side of the Moon, which because of tidal locking is never visible from Earth.[33]
  • Black holes, unlike the common image, do not act as cosmic vacuum cleaners any more than do other stars. [citation needed]When a star evolves into a black hole, the gravitational attraction at a given distance from the body is no greater than it was for the star. That is to say, were the Sun to be replaced by a black hole of the same mass, the Earth would continue in the same orbit. Due to a black hole's formation being explosive in nature, the object would lose a certain amount of its energy in the process, which—according to the mass–energy equivalence—means that a black-hole would be of lower mass than the parent object, and actually have a weaker gravitational pull.[34]
  • When a meteor lands on Earth (after which it is termed a meteorite), it is not usually hot. In fact, many are found with frost on them. A meteor's great speed during reentry is enough to melt or vaporize its outermost layer, but any molten material will be quickly blown off (ablated), and the interior of the meteor does not have time to heat up because rocks are poor conductors of heat. Also, atmospheric drag can slow small meteors to terminal velocity by the time they hit the ground, giving the surface time to cool down.[35]
  • The human body can briefly survive the hard vacuum of space unprotected, despite contrary depictions in much popular science fiction. Human flesh expands to about twice its size in such conditions, giving the visual effect of a body builder rather than an overfilled balloon. Consciousness is retained for up to 15 seconds as the effects of oxygen starvation set in. No snap freeze effect occurs because all heat must be lost through thermal radiation or the evaporation of liquids, and the blood does not boil because it remains pressurised within the body. The greatest danger is in attempting to hold one's breath before exposure, as the subsequent explosive decompression can damage the lungs. These effects have been confirmed through various accidents (including in very high altitude conditions, outer space and training vacuum chambers).[36][37] Human skin does not need to be protected from vacuum and is gas-tight by itself. Instead it only needs to be mechanically compressed to retain its normal shape. This can be accomplished with a tight-fitting elastic body suit and a helmet for containing breathing gases, known as a Space activity suit.
  • It is a common misconception[citation needed] that it's easier to balance an egg on its end on the first day of spring. In fact, the ease or difficulty of balancing an egg is the same 365 days a year. This myth is said to originate with the "egg of Li Chun", an ancient Chinese folk belief that it is easier to balance an egg on Li Chun, the first day of spring in the Chinese lunar calendar. It was introduced to the western world in a Life article in 1945, and popularized once again by self-titled 'urban shaman' Donna Henes, who has hosted an annual egg balancing ceremony in New York City since the mid-1970s.[38][39][40][41][42]

Health

A "tongue map" showing zones which taste bitter, sour, salty and sweet. In reality, all zones can sense all tastes.
  • Different tastes can be detected on all parts of the tongue by taste buds,[43] with slightly increased sensitivities in different locations depending on the person, contrary to the popular belief that specific tastes only correspond to specific mapped sites on the tongue.[44] The original "tongue map" was based on a mistranslation by a Harvard psychologist of a discredited German paper[45] that was written in 1901.
  • People do not use only ten percent of their brains. This myth is thought by some to have emerged after the discovery of glial cells in the brain, or it could have been the result of some other misunderstood or misinterpreted legitimate scientific findings, or even been the result of speculation by self-help gurus.[46]
  • There is no single theory that satisfactorily explains myopia—in particular, studies show that "eyestrain" from close reading and computer games does not explain myopia. There is also no evidence that reading in dim light or sitting close to a television causes vision to deteriorate.[47]
  • Shaving does not cause hair to grow back thicker or coarser or darker. This belief is due to the fact that hair that has never been cut has a tapered end, whereas, after cutting, there is no taper. Thus, it appears thicker, and feels coarser due to the sharper, unworn edges.[48] Hair can also appear darker after it grows back because hair that has never been cut is often lighter due to sun exposure.
  • Hair and fingernails do not continue to grow after a person dies. Rather, the skin dries and shrinks away from the bases of hairs and nails, giving the appearance of growth.[49]
  • There is no cure for split ends or damaged hair. Shampoos and conditioners that advertise themselves as being able to reverse damage or reduce split ends are incorrect. Scientifically, the only way to cure split ends is by a simple haircut. Once the cuticle of the hair shaft is split, it can often still grow split, but can never be mended. Haircare products can be used to soften the texture by using fillers that attach to the hair shaft, making the hair appear healthier.[citation needed]
  • The number of human senses is often said to be five; however, this count is inexact, for the senses of balance, acceleration, temperature, proprioception and pain—all distinct senses—are often grouped together as the sense of "feeling".
  • Snapping or cracking one's knuckles does not cause arthritis.[50]
  • Sugar does not cause hyperactivity in children.[51] Double blind trials have shown no difference in behaviour between children given sugar full or sugar-free diets, even in studies specifically looking at children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder or those considered "sensitive" to sugar. In fact, it was found that the difference in the children's behaviour was all in the parents' minds.
  • A disproportionate amount of heat is not lost through the head.[52] This myth originated from a poorly undertaken military study that went on to suggest that "40 to 45 percent of body heat"[53] was lost through the head. Recent studies have shown that heat loss from the head is completely proportionate.
  • Eating at night is not associated with weight gain.[54] Some studies have shown this to be true, however it has since been shown that such conclusions were due to a confusion between correlation and causation[dubiousdiscuss].
  • Prolonged exposure to cold weather such as rain or winter conditions does not increase the likelihood of catching a cold.[55] Although common colds are seasonal, with more occurring during winter, experiments so far have failed to produce evidence that short-term exposure to cold weather or direct chilling increases susceptibility to infection, implying that the seasonal variation is instead due to a change in behaviors such as increased time spent indoors close to others.[56][57][58][59][60]

Biology

  • The indigenous people of North America can grow facial hair, contrary to the misconception[by whom?] that they cannot.[61][62]
  • Warts on human skin are caused by viruses that are unique to humans (Human papillomavirus). Humans cannot catch warts from toads or other animals; the bumps on a toad are not warts.[63]
  • The claim[64] that a duck's quack does not echo is false, although the echo may be difficult to hear for humans under some circumstances.[65]
  • The notion that goldfish have a memory of only three seconds is completely false[66]. They have been trained to navigate mazes and can recognize their owners after an exposure of a few months.[67][68]
  • Lemmings do not engage in suicidal dives off cliffs when migrating. They will, however, occasionally, and unintentionally fall off cliffs when venturing into unknown territory, with no knowledge of the boundaries of the environment. The misconception is due largely to the Disney film White Wilderness, which shot many of the migration scenes (also staged by using multiple shots of different groups of lemmings) on a large, snow-covered turntable in a studio. Photographers later pushed the lemmings off a cliff.[69][70]
  • Some bats use echolocation to navigate while flying in darkness. Bats are not blind, however.[71][72] Their eyes are small and poorly developed, but they are still capable of sight, particularly long-range, and in fact can be severely disoriented by excessive light.[citation needed]
  • Chameleons do not change color to match their surroundings.[73] They are naturally camouflaged and, although they can change their skin color into a variety of different colors, these changes are caused by temperature or interaction with predators or other Chameleons. Anole lizards commonly known sold as "Anole Chameleons" do change color for camoflage.[citation needed]
  • Mammal blood is bright red or scarlet when oxygenated and a darker red when not oxygenated. It is never blue. Veins appear blue through the skin because of Rayleigh scattering, the same effect responsible for the blue sky.[74]
  • The claim[by whom?] that individuals with a different number of chromosomes can never produce viable offspring is false—Przewalski's Horse, for example, can produce viable offspring with the common horse, despite a different number of chromosomes. Such hybrids are also common in plants.[citation needed]
  • An earthworm does not become two worms when cut in half. An earthworm can survive being bisected, but only the front half of the worm (where the mouth is located) can survive, while the other half dries out or starves to death. If one cuts the worm too close to the saddle (the fat pink section where all of the worm's vital organs are located) then the worm may die.[75] On the other hand, species of the planaria family of flatworms actually do become two new planaria when bisected or split down the middle.
  • According to urban myth,[76] the Daddy Long-Legs Spider (Pholcus phalangioides) is the most venomous spider in the world, but it is harmless to humans because its fangs cannot penetrate human skin.[citation needed] This is false as Pholcus phalangioides can pierce human skin, however, the toxicity of this spider's venom has just a weak effect on insects, let alone humans.[77] It is likely this myth arose because some pholcidae actually prey upon and eat other spiders, including the black widow spider.[citation needed] In addition, there is also confusion regarding the use of the name Daddy Long Legs, because Harvestmen (order Opiliones, which are not spiders) and crane flies (which are insects) are also commonly referred to as Daddy Long Legs.[78]
  • It is sometimes claimed[by whom?] that half, or more than half, of all humans who were ever born are alive today. The claim itself is poorly defined, as there is no definite starting point for the human species. However, even adopting conservative values regarding the origins of humanity, a significantly lower proportion of the human population is currently alive.[79] See also World population: Number of humans who have ever lived.

Physics

  • The Coriolis effect does not determine the direction that water rotates in a bathtub drain or a flushing toilet. The Coriolis force is relatively small; it appears over large scales (like weather systems) or in systems such as the Foucault pendulum in which the small influence is allowed to accumulate over time. In a bathtub or toilet, the flow of the water over the basin itself produces forces that dwarf the Coriolis force. In addition, most toilets inject water into the bowl at an angle, causing a spin too fast to be affected by the Coriolis effect.[80]
  • Gyroscopic forces are not required for a rider to balance a bicycle.[81][82][83] However, the stability of a bicycle is improved by gyroscopic forces as well as by its geometry and the rider's ability to counteract tilting by steering.
An illustration of the equal transit-time fallacy.
  • It is not true that air takes the same time to travel above and below an aircraft's wing.[84] This misconception, illustrated at right, is widespread among textbooks and non-technical reference books, and even appears in pilot training materials.
  • Some textbooks state that electricity within wires flows at nearly (or even exactly) the speed of light,[85] which can give the impression that electrons themselves move almost instantly through a circuit. The electrons in a typical wire actually move on the order of centimeters per hour (much slower than a snail). The random thermal motions of the electrons are much faster than this, but still much slower than light, and with no tendency to occur in any particular direction. It is the electrical signal that travels almost at the speed of light. The information that a light switch has been turned on propagates to the bulb very quickly, but the charge carriers move slowly.[citation needed]
  • The blue color of lakes and oceans is not only a reflection of the blue sky. Water looks blue because water is blue; the water molecules do absorb some light, and they absorb red frequencies more than blue.[86] The effect is small, so the blue color only becomes obvious when observing layers of water many meters (or more) thick. (This effect is noticeable to a lesser amount in white-painted swimming pools.) In salt water or mineral-laden fresh water, the color of dissolved minerals can also be seen. Sky-reflection does play a role, but it is not the only factor.
  • Some believe that the sky looks blue because it reflects the color of the ocean.[citation needed] The sky actually looks blue because the color of air varies with the viewing angle to the illumination source. Sunlight reflected (scattered) from the air is of shorter wavelengths toward the violet end of the visible spectrum, while the remaining transmitted sunlight has longer wavelengths of the red end of the spectrum. In fact, the sun appears reddish in the evening because the transmitted sunlight has lost much of its blue wavelengths because of scattering, leaving only the long wavelength red light to reach the observer. This phenomenon is referred to as Rayleigh Scattering.
  • Astronauts in orbiting spacecraft are not in a location where there is zero gravity in an objective sense. They accelerate along with the spacecraft. The principle of equivalence shows that accelerating free-fall environment is exactly the same in every respect as zero-gravity. NASA refers to near free-fall conditions with low G-force acceleration as microgravity. Earth's gravitational effects are very strong at the low orbit altitudes used by the space shuttle, where the acceleration due to gravity is about 85% of what it is at Earth's surface. Gravity falls off rapidly as one leaves the Earth's surface, but one can never completely escape the gravitational pull even at vast distances, though the effect will become negligible. A free-fall situation is sometimes called "simulated zero-gravity", and can be experienced in any near-freefall situation, including extremely fast elevators and skydiving. Astronauts ride inside free-falling airplanes for training (see Vomit Comet).
  • While the Earth's north magnetic pole is near the geographic north pole, it is in physics terms a south magnetic pole. By accepted convention, a compass needle is a magnet whose north-seeking end is termed the "north" end of the magnet. Therefore, because magnetic poles are attracted to their opposites, the compass needle points to the magnetic south pole of the Earth's magnetic field. The Arctic pole is a south-type pole, while the Antarctic pole is a north-type pole. The poles have undergone geomagnetic reversal in the past, the last being the Brunhes-Matuyama reversal of 780,000 years ago. Earth also has a more complicated magnetic field than one might get from a simple dipole. The earth has a strong overall dipole which is superposed on a weaker quadrupole, as well as higher-order magnetic moments. Not only have the magnetic poles moved to opposite geographic poles in the past, but they also drift around more or less randomly, presumably because of the movements of the molten nickel-iron alloy in the Earth's core.
  • Introductory science courses often teach that the period of a pendulum is independent of its amplitude (this is called isochronism), and students often mistakenly believe that is precisely true. It is only approximately true and only for small amplitudes, (see small angle approximation), for which a pendulum approximates simple harmonic motion
  • It is not true that a nozzle (or a person's thumb) on the end of a garden hose makes the water squirt farther because the same amount of water gets forced through a smaller opening. The rate of flow of water through the hose is not a set constant; in fact, putting one's thumb over the end of the hose reduces the rate of flow. What is constant is the water pressure at the source. When water is flowing, the pressure decreases the farther from the source one gets due to friction between the water and the pipes it's flowing through. The faster the water moves through the pipe, the greater is the friction that cuts down pressure at the output end. A thumb over the end of the hose decreases the flow rate, causing the friction from the source to decrease, causing the remaining water to have more speed.[87]
  • Putting a teaspoon in the neck of an opened bottle of champagne will not help it retain its fizz.[88] The misconception may arise from the fact that few people have two bottles of champagne open and unfinished at the same time to perform an accurate comparison.[89] and likely suffer from subjective validation bias.
  • It is not true that paper can be folded in half a maximum of seven, eight, ten, or indeed any selected number of times. It is true, however, that there is a loss function associated with each fold, and thus there is such a practical limit for a normal sized (letter or A4) sheet of writing paper. (A football field-sized sheet of paper was folded in half eleven times on episode 72 of Mythbusters.)
A Crookes radiometer
  • Several incorrect explanations have been circulated for what causes a Crookes radiometer (pictured) to turn. The earliest incorrect explanation – that its motion is caused by radiation pressure – was posited by its inventor, Sir William Crookes.[90] A common subsequent explanation, still offered by references such as Encyclopaedia Britannica,[91] is that its motion is caused by expansion of gas near the black side of the vanes, due to its absorbing more radiation and passing on that heat to gas molecules that strike it. This explanation only explains a part of the force exerted on the radiometer.[92] A fuller explanation includes the effect of thermal creep – the tendency of a gas to flow from hot to cold areas (in this case, around the edges of the vanes).[92][93][94][95][96]
  • Surface area does not have much influence on the frictional force between two surfaces. Although friction is not an exact science, a good approximation in many circumstances is that the frictional force between two surfaces sliding past each other depends on two factors: the coefficient of friction and the normal force between the surfaces. A common misconception is that increasing the width of a vehicle's tires will decrease the breaking distance.
  • Glass is not a high-viscosity liquid at room temperature: it is an amorphous solid, although it does have some chemical properties normally associated with liquids. Panes of stained glass windows often have thicker glass at the bottom than at the top, and this has been cited as an example of the slow flow of glass over centuries. However, this unevenness is due to the window manufacturing processes used in earlier eras, which produced glass panes that were unevenly thick at the time of their installation. It is not uncommon to find old windows that are thicker at the sides or the top.[97][98]

Evolution

  • Biological evolution does not address the origin of life; for that, see abiogenesis. The two are commonly and mistakenly conflated. Evolution describes the changes in gene frequencies that occur in populations of living organisms over time, and thus, presupposes that life already exists. Evolution likewise says nothing about cosmology, the Big Bang, or the origins of the universe, galaxy, solar system, or Earth, although the term 'evolution' in the sense of a slow unfolding is used to describe such processes, e.g. Stellar Evolution, Cosmic Evolution.[citation needed]
  • The word "theory" in "the theory of evolution" does not imply doubt in mainstream science regarding its validity; the words "theory" and "hypothesis" are not the same in a scientific context (see Evolution as theory and fact). While "theory" in conventional usage tends to denote a "hunch" or conjecture, a scientific theory is a set of principles which, via logical induction, explains the observations in nature. The same inductive inferences can be made to predict observations before they are made. Evolution is a theory in the same sense as the theory of gravity or the theory of relativity.[citation needed]
  • Humans did not evolve from monkeys or from any current non-human apes.[99] Rather, humans and other modern simianschimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, baboons, etc.—all share a common early ancestor. It is believed that humans are more closely related to modern fellow apes than to monkeys, and humans and other apes share a later common ancestor that lived around 7 million years ago in the late Miocene epoch.[100][101] However, fossil discoveries of "recently" (as in, only millions of years ago) extinct species are, in the experience of paleontologists, rarely direct ancestors of living species (cf. missing link).
  • The process of biological evolution is not necessarily slow. Millions of years are not necessarily required to see speciation (a change in characteristics of a kind of organism, typically rendering offspring infertile with the previous species). Indeed, it has been observed multiple times under both controlled laboratory conditions and in nature.[102][citation needed]
  • Evolution is not a progression from "lower" to "higher", and evolution does not require an increase in complexity (see Evolution of complexity). A population can evolve to become simpler with less genetic information, and have a smaller genome—often called "devolution", but that is a misnomer.[103][104]
  • The claim that "almost all mutations are harmful" is strictly speaking false. In fact, most mutations have no noticeable effect, mainly because most mutations do not occur within coding or regulatory regions of the genome. One study gives the average number of mutations that arise in a human conception to be around 128, with an average number of harmful mutations per conception of 1.3. However, most mutations that have an effect on phenotype are indeed detrimental to the organism.[105]
  • The claim that evolution makes no meaningful predictions is not true—for example the discovery of the relationship between chromosome 2 and chimpanzee chromosomes at the end of the completion of the human and chimp genome projects was predicted, and makes meaningful sense as evidence of a common ancestor.[citation needed]
  • The characterization of evolution as the "survival of the fittest" (in the sense of "only the best-adapted organisms will prevail", a view common in social Darwinism) is not consistent with the actual theory of evolution. Any organism which is capable of reproducing itself before dying is considered "fit". If the organism is able to do so on an ongoing basis, it will survive as a species. A more accurate characterization of evolution would be "survival of the fit enough".[106][107]

Earth science

Linguistics

  • The Inuit do not have a large number of words for snow. In fact, English has many unrelated root words for snow, such as: snow, sleet, powder, flurry, drift, avalanche and blizzard. Each Eskimo-Aleut language has a similar number of unrelated root words. Since these languages are polysynthetic, arbitrarily complex thoughts such as "snow with a herring-scale pattern etched into it by rainfall" can be expressed in a single long word each, but this feature of the language is by no means restricted to snow.[113]

Religion

  • Albert Einstein was neither religious (in the traditional sense) nor an atheist. He did not believe in God in a "personal" sense and discounted the existence of a creator; rather, he was a rationalistic pantheist and follower of Baruch Spinoza. Many people misinterpreted his words in public, to which Einstein himself responded by saying: "It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it." (See also: Einstein quotes)[citation needed]
  • The phrase "separation of church and state" does not occur in the U.S. Constitution. It was first used in a letter Thomas Jefferson wrote to the Danbury Baptist Association of Connecticut, reassuring them that religious minorities (such as Baptists) would be protected under the Bill of Rights. His expression "wall of separation between church and state" was a description of an intended effect of the First Amendment's Establishment and Free Exercise provisions, not a quotation therefrom.[114]

Judaism and Christianity

  • Nowhere in the Bible is the fruit eaten by Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden referred to as an apple. The fruit is called the "fruit of the tree" (that is, the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil), and neither the fruit nor the tree is identified by species. In Middle English, as late as the 17th century "apple" was a generic term for all fruit other than berries but including nuts.[115] However, in continental European art from that period representing the Fall of Man the fruit is often depicted as an apple.
  • The term Immaculate Conception does not refer to Jesus's conception by the Virgin Mary (see Virgin Birth of Jesus), but rather to the Roman Catholic teaching that Mary herself was conceived without the stain of Original Sin. (See also Blessed Virgin Mary.)
  • Nowhere in the Bible is Mary Magdalene ever referred to as a prostitute. Before her seeing the risen Jesus, the only other mention besides the listing of her name is the mentioning in Luke 8:2[116] that she had been possessed by seven demons. In fact there are several sinful women mentioned in the gospels, one of whom is "caught in adultery". Pope Gregory conflated this woman with Mary Magdalene in one of his sermons and thus propagated this idea.
  • The canon of the New Testament was not selected by Constantine at the First Council of Nicaea. Constantine did not personally have a vote on the council, and the canon had been settled mainly by common consent among the clergy from the early second century. Furthermore, the council did not consider the matter of canon in its proceedings. (See Development of the New Testament canon.)[citation needed]
  • Nowhere in the Bible does it say exactly three wise men came from afar on camels to visit "Baby Jesus"[117] It was assumed that there were three Biblical Magi because three gifts are described.
  • The Gospel accounts of Jesus' birth say nothing about an inn-keeper or even an inn. The Greek word for an inn is pandocheion, while the word used to describe where Jesus was supposedly born is kataluma, which is better translated as "guestroom".

Hinduism

  • Hinduism is not one distinct religion, but was considered to be so since at least AD 1323, as attested by South Indian and Kashmiri texts,[118] and increasingly so during the British rule. Since the end of the 18th century the word has been used as an umbrella term for most of the religious, spiritual, and philosophical traditions of the sub-continent, excluding the distinct religions of Sikhism, Buddhism, Jainism and Islam. Despite this, many traditions considered "Hindu" today draw their validity from core texts called the Vedas, though in various degrees; some traditions assert that their own texts supersede the Vedas. The traditions that reject the Vedas are considered nastika (heterodox), as opposed to astika (orthodox). Shiva, Vishnu and Brahma are now seen as trinity; that is, highest in the order of Hindu Gods (See Astika and Nastika). Nastika is often translated as "atheist", though it does not exactly correspond to the English word.[119]

Islam

  • The Qur'an promises martyrs will be awarded virgins in heaven but specifies no number. There is a Hadith attributed to Muhammad [120] stating that there will be 72.[121]
  • The Niqāb veil (and by extension, Burqa) is not considered by all[122] Islamic scholars to be obligatory. Some view it as a voluntary show of piety. The passage in the Quran instructing women to "…not display their beauty and ornaments except what (must ordinarily) appear thereof; that they should draw their veils over their bosoms and not display their beauty except to…" is interpreted by some to require covering off the hair, while others say it simply calls for modesty of dress.[123]
  • Allah does not refer to a Muslim, as opposed to a Christian, God. It is simply the Arabic word for "The God". Arabic-speaking Christians and Jews also refer to God as "Allah".[124]
  • Jihad is not an "Islamic war on the western world" but rather a verb meaning to struggle or to strive. One can have an internal jihad, family jihad, or religious jihad, which may or may not include violence towards non-Muslims.[125] A comparison may be made with the term "crusade", which is sometimes considered by Muslims to mean Western violence against Islam, when it is more often used as a metaphorical struggle; for example, "a crusade against drugs".[126]
  • A fatwā is a religious opinion on Islamic law issued by an Islamic scholar, not a death sentence. The popular misconception[citation needed] likely stems from the death sentence pronounced as a fatwā on the author Salman Rushdie in 1989 by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini of Iran.[citation needed]

Paganism

Technology

Inventions

Computing

Gaming

  • Pong was not the first video game. In fact, OXO, created in 1952, was one of the first electronic games to use a graphical display, utilizing a cathode ray tube on the EDSAC computer. There are also patent records for an earlier game using a CRT, but no existing physical records of it. The first commercially sold coin-operated video game, Computer Space, was created in 1971 by the future founders of Atari. Fearing that Computer Space had not been popular because of its complexity, Nolan Bushnell and Allan Alcorn created Pong in 1972 after Bushnell had seen a similar game at a trade show.[138]

Transportation

  • The ship Mary Celeste was not called Marie Celeste. Arthur Conan Doyle used the Marie Celeste spelling in his fictional story J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement, based on the incident.[citation needed]
  • The first heavier-than-air craft was not flown by the Wright brothers. Human-flown gliders and kites had been flown far earlier. The Wright brothers did fly the first heavier-than-air craft capable of controlled and sustained powered flight.[139] There is even some evidence to show Clément Ader was the first to fly a heavier-than-air craft capable of controlled and sustained powered flight in 1890.[140][citation needed]
  • Charles Lindbergh was not the first man to fly the Atlantic Ocean, although he was the first to have flown across it solo. The first flight had been done first in stages between May 8 and May 31, 1919, by the crew of the Navy-Curtiss NC-4 flying boat which took 24 days to complete its journey. The first truly non-stop transatlantic flight was made in 1919 by John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown in a modified Vickers Vimy bomber.[citation needed]
  • The United States Interstate Highway System was not designed with airplane landings in mind. A common urban legend states that one out of every five (or ten) miles of highway must be straight and flat to allow emergency (or military) airplane landings, but this is not the case.[141][142] However, several parts of the German and later the Swiss Autobahn system were indeed designed to be auxiliary military airports, both during World War II and the Cold War.[143]
A "black" box
  • The German Autobahn was not designed by Adolf Hitler or the Third Reich cabinet. It came into design 20 years before Hitler's reign, and was first implemented a year before he came to power.[144]
  • The Black box, used for aviation accident investigation, is actually bright orange.[citation needed]
  • Toilet waste is not dumped overboard in aircraft. All waste is collected in tanks which are emptied on the ground by special toilet waste vehicles. A vacuum is used to allow the toilet to be flushed with less water and because plumbing cannot rely on gravity alone in an aircraft in motion.[145]

Sports

  • There are several misconceptions related to the colored belt ranking system in martial arts. First, the system was invented in the early 20th century, contrary to the myth that it is based on the ancient practice of students starting with a white belt and gaining a black belt through accumulated dirt, sweat, and blood on an unwashed belt.[146] Second, receiving a black belt usually does not mean mastery, as there are always several levels of black belt for each martial art, and standards for attaining a belt can vary greatly.[147] Third, a prevalent American myth is that black belts must register their hands as a deadly weapon with law enforcement agencies.[148]
  • Abner Doubleday did not invent baseball (see The Abner Doubleday myth).
  • The ice hockey term "Original Six", contrary to its implication, does not refer to the six original members of the National Hockey League. It actually refers to the six teams which formed the entire league from 1942 to 1967. Only two of them were actually charter NHL members, but all six were founded within the NHL's first decade.[citation needed]
  • Another common ice hockey misconception, mainly among Americans, is that the game known as the "Miracle on Ice" in the 1980 Winter Olympics clinched the gold medal for the USA team. Even though Team USA stunned the heavily favored Soviet team in that game, it did not clinch the gold medal. Under Olympic hockey rules at that time, the medal round was contested in a round-robin format. Team USA went into its final game against Finland with the mathematical possibility of finishing in any position from first to fourth. The Americans defeated Finland to secure the gold medal.[citation needed]
  • Michael Phelps has not won more Olympic medals than any other athlete: Larissa Latynina has this distinction, having earned 18 medals in comparison with Phelps's total of 16 (as of 2008). Phelps, rather, has won the most total gold medals as well as the most total medals at a single Olympic Games, and is tied with two other athletes for the most individual golds at a single Games.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ For compendiums of common misconceptions, see Karl Kruszelnicki, Great Mythconceptions: The Science Behind the Myths (Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2006); Ferris Johnsen, The Encyclopedia of Popular Misconceptions: The Ultimat Debunker's Guide to Widely Accepted Fallacies (Carol Pub. Group, 1994).
  2. ^ The Myth of the Flat Earth
  3. ^ Dicks, D.R. (1970). Early Greek Astronomy to Aristotle. p. 68. ISBN 9780801405617.
  4. ^ The William Dawes who Rode
  5. ^ MSNBC- Washington's False Teeth Not Wooden
  6. ^ Text of the Emancipation Proclamation
  7. ^ Chronology of the Civil War
  8. ^ Top 10 Myths about Thanksgiving
  9. ^ Viva Cinco de Mayo.org
  10. ^ Mexican Independence Day . El Grito.16 de Septiembre
  11. ^ www.napoleon.com
  12. ^ Steckel, Richard H. (October 2001). "Health and Nutrition in the Preindustrial Era: Insights from a Millennium of Average Heights in Northern Europe" (PDF). (U.S.) National Bureau of Economic Research (Working paper). p. 35. Retrieved 2008-12-23.
  13. ^ New International Encyclopedia, Second Edition, Volume VI (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1914), 108.
  14. ^ Snopes on Mussolini
  15. ^ http://www.solarnavigator.net/history/vikings.htm
  16. ^ "Generations Divide Over Military Action in Iraq", Pew Research Center commentary, 17 October 2002.
  17. ^ Snopes: Al Gore on the invention of the internet
  18. ^ Does searing meat really seal in moisture?
  19. ^ McGee, Harold (2004). On Food and Cooking (Revised Edition). Scribner. ISBN 0-684-80001-2. Page 161, "The Searing Question".
  20. ^ Mussel myth an open and shut case
  21. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed., tea. ("5. Used as a general name for infusions made in the same way as tea (sense 2), usually from the leaves, blossoms, or other parts of plants; mostly used medicinally, sometimes as ordinary drinks.") Webster's Third New International Dictionary, tea. ("2a (1) : any of numerous plants somewhat resembling tea in appearance or properties (2) : an infusion prepared from their leaves and used medicinally or as a beverage - used usu. with qualifying adjective or attributive").
  22. ^ http://www.theolympian.com/living/story/774075.html
  23. ^ http://recipes.howstuffworks.com/tea.htm
  24. ^ http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2003-05/a-2003-05-17-7-Teaism.cfm
  25. ^ Does alcohol burn off in cooking?
  26. ^ The complete idiot's guide to Asian cooking by Annie Wong, Jeffrey Yarbrough; Alpha Books, 2002; ISBN 0028643844, 9780028643847.
  27. ^ How to Do Everything: Everything You Should Know How to Do Rosemarie Jarski; Published by Globe Pequot, 2007; ISBN 1599212218, 9781599212210.
  28. ^ [recipes.howstuffworks.com/sushi.htm]
  29. ^ Volokh
  30. ^ Snopes on Entrapment
  31. ^ The Family Memoirs of the Rev. William Stukeley (Durham: Surtees Society, 1882-1887) Vol. 3, p. 142.
  32. ^ Great Walls of Liar, Snopes.com. Retrieved 2 January 2008.
  33. ^ NASA on the dark side of the moon
  34. ^ Misner, Charles W (1973). Gravitation. ISBN 978-0716703440. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  35. ^ Plait, Philip (2002). Bad Astronomy: Misconceptions and Misuses Revealed, from Astrology to the Moon Landing "Hoax". John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-40976-6.
  36. ^ "Ask an Astrophysicist, Human Body in a Vacuum". NASA's Imagine the Universe. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  37. ^ "Outer Space Exposure". Damn Interesting. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
  38. ^ http://gothamist.com/2007/10/31/donna_henes_urb.php
  39. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A2181377
  40. ^ http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2008/mar/20/you-can-balance-an-egg-on-its-end-today-and-any/
  41. ^ Can You Balance Eggs on End During the Spring Equinox
  42. ^ Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy: Misconceptions
  43. ^ Huang A. L., et al. ""The cells and logic for mammalian sour taste detection""., Nature, 442. 934 - 938 (2006).
  44. ^ Beyond the Tongue Map
  45. ^ Hänig, D.P., 1901. Zur Psychophysik des Geschmackssinnes. Philosophische Studien, 17: 576-623.
  46. ^ Snopes on brains
  47. ^ Vision myths
  48. ^ snopes.com: Shaved Hair Grows Darker
  49. ^ Graham-Brown, Robin (2007). Lecture Notes on Dermatology. Blackwell. p. 6. ISBN 1-4051-3977-3. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  50. ^ Prevention Health Books, Outsmart arthritis: expert-endorsed remedies for short-term relief and lifetime control (Macmillan, 2003), 15.
  51. ^ "Festive Medical Myths". Vreeman RC, Carroll AE. British Medical Journal 2008;337:a2769.
  52. ^ "Festive Medical Myths". Vreeman RC, Carroll AE. British Medical Journal 2008;337:a2769.
  53. ^ US Army Survival Manual: FM 21-76: US Department of the Army, 1970:148.
  54. ^ "Festive Medical Myths". Vreeman RC, Carroll AE. British Medical Journal 2008;337:a2769.
  55. ^ Zuger, Abigail 'You'll Catch Your Death!' An Old Wives' Tale? Well . . . The New York Times (March 4, 2003). Retrieved on 12-17-08.
  56. ^ "Common Cold". National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. 2006-11-27. Retrieved 2007-06-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  57. ^ Dowling HF, Jackson GG, Spiesman IG, Inouye T (1958). "Transmission of the common cold to volunteers under controlled conditions. III. The effect of chilling of the subjects upon susceptibility". American journal of hygiene. 68 (1): 59–65. PMID 13559211.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  58. ^ Eccles R (2002). "Acute cooling of the body surface and the common cold". Rhinology. 40 (3): 109–14. PMID 12357708.
  59. ^ Douglas, R.G.Jr, K.M. Lindgren, and R.B. Couch (1968). "Exposure to cold environment and rhinovirus common cold. Failure to demonstrate effect". New Engl. J. Med. 279.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  60. ^ Douglas RC, Couch RB, Lindgren KM (1967). "Cold doesn't affect the "common cold" in study of rhinovirus infections". JAMA. 199 (7): 29–30. doi:10.1001/jama.199.7.29. PMID 4289651.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  61. ^ "Amerindian Pictures Painted by Those Who Were There". Hutchison Research Center. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  62. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions - Page 2". WWW Virtual Library - American Indians, Index of Native American Resources on the Internet. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  63. ^ www.londondrugs.com: Putting an End to Warts
  64. ^ Mythbusters Does a Duck's Quack Echo? (Season 1, Episode 8)
  65. ^ University of Salford Acoustics
  66. ^ http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/19/2166204.htm
  67. ^ www.livenews.com.au: SA Schoolboy Explodes Fish Memory Myth
  68. ^ nootropics.com: Goldfish Pass Memory Test
  69. ^ Snopes - Lemmings
  70. ^ http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=105x64745
  71. ^ [1]
  72. ^ [2]
  73. ^ http://www.ccmr.cornell.edu/education/ask/index.html?quid=912
  74. ^ Shuster, Carl N (2004). "Chapter 11: A blue blood: the circulatory system". In Shuster, Carl N, Jr; Barlow, Robert B; Brockmann, H. Jane (ed.). The American Horseshoe Crab. Harvard University Press. p. 276-277. ISBN 0674011597.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  75. ^ BBC: Gardening with children - Worms
  76. ^ http://spiders.ucr.edu/daddylonglegs.html
  77. ^ "Spider Myths - If it could only bite".
  78. ^ "UCR Entomology Spiders - Daddy Long Legs".
  79. ^ BBC - More or Less Radio Programme, edition broadcast Monday 7 April 2008.
  80. ^ "Which way will my bathtub drain". Usenet Physics FAQ. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  81. ^ Whitt, Frank R. (1982). Bicycling Science (Second edition ed.). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. pp. 198–233. ISBN 0-262-23111-5. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  82. ^ Klein, Richard E. "Bicycle Science". Retrieved 2006-08-04. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  83. ^ Jones, David E. H. (1970). "The stability of the bicycle" (PDF). Physics Today. 23 (4): 34–40. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
  84. ^ Incorrect Lift Theory
  85. ^ http://www.eskimo.com/~billb/miscon/eleca.html
  86. ^ "What is the colour of water?".
  87. ^ Epstein, L.C. Thinking Physics. San Francisco: Insight Press. ISBN 0-935218-06-8
  88. ^ Jefford, Andrew. "Bubble and Chic". Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  89. ^ O'Hare, Mick (22 January 2008). How to Fossilize Your Hamster: And Other Amazing Experiments for the Armchair Scientist. Holt Rinehart and Winston. p. 256. ISBN 0805087702. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  90. ^ http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/LightMill/light-mill.html
  91. ^ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/489199/radiometer#ref76722
  92. ^ a b http://arxiv.org/pdf/physics/0402011
  93. ^ http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1997APS..PC...J206K
  94. ^ http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/CrookesRadiometerAComedyOfErrors/
  95. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=1AsFdUxOwu8C&pg=RA1-PA511
  96. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=Nc0rAAAAYAAJ&dq=crookes+radiometer+%22radiation+pressure&q=radiometer+%22radiation+pressure%22&pgis=1#search_anchor
  97. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/29/science/29glass.html
  98. ^ http://www.glassnotes.com/WindowPanes.html
  99. ^ Human are themselves apes, biologically speaking.
  100. ^ Brunet M, Guy F, Pilbeam D; et al. (2002). "A new hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad, Central Africa". Nature. 418 (6894): 145–51. doi:10.1038/nature00879. PMID 12110880. {{cite journal}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  101. ^ Brunet M, Guy F, Pilbeam D; et al. (2005). "New material of the earliest hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad". Nature. 434 (7034): 752–5. doi:10.1038/nature03392. PMID 15815627. {{cite journal}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  102. ^ Jiggins CD, Bridle JR (2004). "Speciation in the apple maggot fly: a blend of vintages?". Trends Ecol. Evol. (Amst.). 19 (3): 111–4. doi:10.1016/j.tree.2003.12.008. PMID 16701238.
    *Boxhorn, J (1995). "Observed Instances of Speciation". The TalkOrigins Archive. Retrieved 2008-12-26.
    *Weinberg JR, Starczak VR, Jorg, D (1992). "Evidence for Rapid Speciation Following a Founder Event in the Laboratory". Evolution. 46 (4): 1214–20. doi:10.2307/2409766.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  103. ^ Scientific American: Is the human race evolving or devolving?, see also biological devolution.
  104. ^ Moran NA (2002). "Microbial minimalism: genome reduction in bacterial pathogens". Cell. 108 (5): 583–6. doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(02)00665-7. PMID 11893328.
  105. ^ F. Giannelli, T. Anagnostopoulos, and P. M. Green (1999-09-15). "Mutation Rates in Humans. II. Sporadic Mutation-Specific Rates and Rate of Detrimental Human Mutations Inferred from Hemophilia B".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[dead link]
  106. ^ Evolution Vs. Creationism: An Introduction. Eugenie Carol Scott, University of California Press, 2005, ISBN 0520233913
  107. ^ "Stephen Jay Gould, Darwin's Untimely Burial", 1976; from Michael Ruse, ed., Philosophy of Biology, New York: Prometheus Books, 1998, pp. 93-98.
  108. ^ Earthquakes on the increase
  109. ^ Eight Charts which Prove That Chandler's Wobble Causes Earthquakes, Volcanism, El Nino, and Global Warming
  110. ^ Exponential Increase in Earthquakes Continues to Escalate
  111. ^ USGS Earthquakes Hazards Program: Earthquakes Facts and Statistics
  112. ^ USGS Earthquakes Hazards Program: Number of Earthquakes per Year, Magnitude 7.0 or Greater
  113. ^ Pullum, Geoffrey K. (4 January 2007). "The snow words myth: Progress at last". Language Log.
  114. ^ Jefferson's Letter to the Danbury Baptists
  115. ^ Apple at the Online Etymology Dictionary
  116. ^ Luke 8
  117. ^ Snopes: 3 Wise Men
  118. ^ David Lorenzen, Who Invented Hinduism? New Delhi 2006, pp. 24-33; Rajatarangini of Yonaraja
  119. ^ Klostermaier, Klaus K. (1989). A Survey of Hinduism. SUNY Press. pp. p. 47. ISBN 0887068073. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  120. ^ Salahuddin Yusuf, Riyadhus Salihin, commentary on Nawawi, Chapter 372, Dar-us-Salam Publications (1999), ISBN-10: 159144053X, ISBN-13: 978-1591440536
  121. ^ How Many Wives Will The Believers Have In Paradise? - Questions answered by Islamic scholar Gibril Haddad
  122. ^ 'Religion and Ethics - Islam. The Niqab
  123. ^ 'The Qu'ran, translation by Yusuf Ali
  124. ^ "Allah." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica
  125. ^ Some words about True and False Jihad
  126. ^ BBC Documentary Series After Rome, episode 2
  127. ^ Catanna.com - Paganism 101
  128. ^ Entheology.org - Pagan Monotheism Origins
  129. ^ "Thomas Crapper". Snopes. 2007-02-22. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  130. ^ Robert, Friedel. Edison's Electric Light: Biography of an Invention. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. pp. 115–117. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  131. ^ "Automobile History - Invention of the Automobile". The Great Idea Finder. 2005. Retrieved 2008-12-13. {{cite web}}: External link in |work= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  132. ^ Ideafinder - Assembly Line
  133. ^ Honeywell v. Sperry-Rand
  134. ^ Jack Copeland, Colossus and the Dawning of the Computer Age, in Smith, Michael (2002). Action This Day. Bantam. ISBN 0593049829. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |nopp= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  135. ^ Warford, J. Stanley (2005). Computer Systems. Jones & Bartlett. p. 647. ISBN 0763732397. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |nopp= and |coauthors= (help)
  136. ^ http://www.forbes.com/global/1999/1227/061_01.html
  137. ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2001/01/08/BU137328.DTL
  138. ^ Video Games: In The Beginning. New Jersey: Rolenta Press. 2005. p. 81. ISBN 0-9643848-1-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  139. ^ "The Wright Brothers & The Invention of the Aerial Age". Smithsonian Institution.
  140. ^ Link to web site about Clément Ader
  141. ^ Landing of Hope and Glory, snopes.com, retrieved 2007-12-30
  142. ^ Weingroff, Richard F. (May/June 2000). "ONE MILE IN FIVE: Debunking the Myth". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved 2006-06-29. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  143. ^ Autobahn-Flugplätze (NLP-Str), lostplaces.de, retrieved 2008-12-16
  144. ^ "German Myth 8 — Hitler & the Autobahn". German About.com.
  145. ^ How Stuff works. "How does the toilet in a commercial airliner work?". Retrieved 2008-06-27.
  146. ^ Ohlenkamp, Neil (January 5, 2009). "The Judo Rank System". Retrieved 2009-01-15.
  147. ^ Ohlenkamp, Neil (June 1, 2004). "What Does a Black Belt Really Mean?". Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  148. ^ Maberry, Jonathan. "Martial Arts Myths & Misconceptions: Black Belts Having To Register As Deadly Weapons". Retrieved 2009-02-23.