Interesting Facts - Page 190

946
The ancient Egyptians bred cats in crowded conditions so that the cats could be sacrificed, mummified, and buried along with people. Millions of cats were mummified. At one point, a shipment of 19 tons of cat mummies was sent from Egypt to London. A single cat was preserved by the British museum and the rest was ground into powder.
947
In the year 1500, Africa had an estimated 26 million elephants and only 47 million people.
948
A graffiti artist was paid in stock options to paint Facebook's headquarters in 2005. When Facebook went public in 2012, his options were worth $200 million. As of 2024, those same shares are worth over $2 billion!
949
According to one historical document, Alfred the Great was the 19th-great-grandson of the Norse god Odin.
950
John B. Watson, author of "Psychological Care of Infant and Child" (1928) was an early expert on child rearing. He raised four children of his own, of which one committed suicide and another two attempted it.
6 Comments
+1
Level 74
Jan 27, 2024
Whoa

So the elephants ruled the people almost

+1
Level 48
Jan 27, 2024
Elephants are the dominant species clearly.
+1
Level 69
Feb 21, 2024
946 - Why did they grind up the rest of the mummified cats?

947- Sad.

948 - The artist's name is David Choe. It seems strange to omit it, as he's a public figure himself.

949 - According to another book, there's this kid named Harry who's a great wizard.

950 - I encourage people to discontinue use of the phrase "committed suicide". It's not a crime and we don't need to force Abrahamic views on suicide on others. You can just say, "died by suicide".

+3
Level 50
Mar 1, 2024
It is illegal in the US to commit suicide (you will be imprisoned if you fail), so yes, "committed suicide" is the proper term, religious or not.
+2
Level 64
Mar 9, 2024
@Jesse the mummified cat powder was made into paint, I believe.
+1
Level 69
May 21, 2024
@autoparts2 You are incorrect. There are no laws against suicide in the United States of America.

Some states appear to laws against attempted suicide, but I couldn't find any evidence that somebody was actually charged with this crime (apart from once case in Papua New Guinea).

My point stands.

You can read more here:

https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/suicide