Skip to content

- Nerve impulses to and from the brain travel as fast as
170 miles per hour. Ever
wonder how you can react so fast to things around you or why that stubbed
toe hurts right away? It’s due to the super-speedy movement of nerve
impulses from your brain to the rest of your body and vice versa, bringing
reactions at the speed of a high powered luxury sports car.
- The brain operates on the same amount of power as
10-watt light bulb. The cartoon
image of a light bulb over your head when a great thought occurs isn’t too
far off the mark. Your brain generates as much energy as a small light
bulb even when you’re sleeping.
- The human brain cell can hold 5 times as much
information as the Encyclopedia Britannica. Or any other encyclopedia for that matter. Scientists
have yet to settle on a definitive amount,
but the storage capacity of the brain in electronic terms is thought to be
between 3 or even 1,000 terabytes. The National Archives of Britain,
containing over 900 years of history, only takes up 70 terabytes, making
your brain’s memory power pretty darn impressive.
- Your brain uses 20% of the oxygen that enters your bloodstream.
The brain only makes up about
2% of our body mass, yet consumes more oxygen than any other organ in the
body, making it extremely susceptible to damage related to oxygen
deprivation. So breathe deep to keep your brain happy and swimming in
oxygenated cells.
- The brain is much more active at night than during the
day. Logically, you would think that
all the moving around, complicated calculations and tasks and general
interaction we do on a daily basis during our working hours would take a
lot more brain power
than, say, lying in bed. Turns out, the opposite is true. When you turn
off your brain turns on. Scientists don’t yet know why this is but you can
thank the hard work of your brain while you sleep for all those pleasant
dreams.
- Scientists say the higher your I.Q. the more you dream.
While this may be true, don’t
take it as a sign you’re mentally lacking if you can’t recall your dreams.
Most of us don’t remember many of our dreams and the average length of
most dreams is only 2-3 seconds–barely long enough to register.
- Neurons continue to grow throughout human life. For years scientists and doctors thought that brain and
neural tissue couldn’t grow or regenerate. While it doesn’t act in the
same manner as tissues in many other parts of the body, neurons can and do
grow throughout your life, adding a whole new dimension to the study of
the brain and the illnesses that affect it.
- Information travels at different speeds within
different types of neurons. Not
all neurons are the same. There are a few different types within the body
and transmission along these different kinds can be as slow as 0.5
meters/sec or as fast as 120 meters/sec.
- The brain itself cannot feel pain. While the brain might be the pain center when you cut
your finger or burn yourself, the brain itself does not have pain
receptors and cannot feel pain. That doesn’t mean your head can’t hurt.
The brain is surrounded by loads of tissues, nerves and blood vessels that
are plenty receptive to pain and can give you a pounding headache.
- 80% of the brain is water. Your brain isn’t the firm, gray mass you’ve seen on TV.
Living brain tissue is a squishy, pink and jelly-like organ thanks to the
loads of blood and high water content of the tissue. So the next time
you’re feeling dehydrated get a drink to keep your brain hydrated.
- Facial hair grows faster than any other hair on the
body. If you’ve ever had a covering
of stubble on your face as you’re clocking out at 5 o’clock you’re
probably pretty familiar with this. In fact, if the average man never
shaved his beard it
would grow to over 30 feet during his lifetime, longer than a killer
whale.
- Every day the average person loses 60-100 strands of
hair. Unless you’re already bald,
chances are good that you’re shedding pretty heavily on a daily basis.
Your hair loss will vary in accordance with the season, pregnancy,
illness, diet and age.
- Women’s hair is about half the diameter of men’s hair. While it might sound strange, it shouldn’t come as too
much of a surprise that men’s hair should be coarser than that of women.
Hair diameter also varies on average between races, making hair plugs on
some men look especially obvious.
- One human hair can support 3.5 ounces. That’s about the weight of two full size candy bars,
and with hundreds of thousands of hairs on the human head, makes the tale
of Rapunzel much
more plausible.
- The fastest growing nail is on the middle finger. And the nail on the middle finger of your dominant hand
will grow the fastest of all. Why is not entirely known, but nail growth
is related to the length of the finger, with the longest fingers growing
nails the fastest and shortest the slowest.
- There are as many hairs per square inch on your body as
a chimpanzee. Humans are not quite the naked
apes that we’re made out to be. We have lots of hair, but on most of us it’s
not obvious as a majority of the hairs are too fine or light to be seen.
- Blondes have more hair. They’re said to have more fun, and they definitely
have more hair. Hair color determines how dense the hair on your head is.
The average human has 100,000 hair follicles, each of which is capable of
producing 20 individual hairs during a person’s lifetime. Blondes average
146,000 follicles while people with black hair tend to have about 110,000
follicles. Those with brown hair fit the average with 100,000 follicles
and redheads have the least dense hair, with about 86,000 follicles.
- Fingernails grow nearly 4 times faster than toenails. If you notice that you’re trimming your fingernails
much more frequently than your toenails you’re not just imagining it. The
nails that get the most exposure and are used most frequently grow the
fastest. On average, nails on both the toes and fingers grow about
one-tenth of an inch each month.
- The lifespan of a human hair is 3 to 7 years on
average. While you quite a few hairs
each day, your hairs actually have a pretty long life providing they
aren’t subject to any trauma. Your hairs will likely get to see several
different haircuts, styles, and even possibly decades before they fall out
on their own.
- You must lose over 50% of your scalp hairs before it is
apparent to anyone. You
lose hundreds of hairs a day but you’ll have to lose a lot more before you
or anyone else will notice. Half of the hairs on your pretty little head
will have to disappear before your impending baldness will become obvious
to all those around you.
- Human hair is virtually indestructible. Aside from it’s flammability, human hair decays at
such a slow rate that it is practically non-disintegrative. If you’ve ever
wondered how your how clogs up your pipes
so quick consider this: hair cannot be destroyed by cold, change of
climate, water, or other natural forces and it is resistant to many kinds
of acids and corrosive chemicals.
0 comments:
Post a Comment