The Liberty Bell is a puny little bell:
Da Vinci's "The Last Supper" is pretty dang big:
Oranges can have green skin in certain climates. Yet, for some reason, they are not called "greens":
This is the Terex 33-19 Titan, an absolute behemoth of a truck that was the largest in the world for multiple decades:
This is what the private movie theater inside the White House looks like:
This is Henry Ford cruising around in the first car he designed, the Quadricycle:
If you boil 5 gallons of ocean water, this is roughly how much salt you'll be left with:
Should you ever get the urge to polish a coconut, this is what it will look like:
This is the "American Super Bowl" section of a German grocery store:
Speaking of which, this is how enormous the mustard section in a German grocery store is:
Not only is there a place that claims the longest hallway in America, but there's also a plaque commemorating it:
This is what a 30-year-old horse's tooth looks like:
Last month, this 500-pound tuna was sold for nearly $800,000 at an auction in Tokyo:
Pine cones, my friend...pine cones can be really, really big:
If you're flying in a plane above Bahrain, you can see the entire country:
This is what the inside of an air mattress looks like:
When the sun is directly overhead, everyday objects won't cast a shadow:
Windmill blades are absolutely gigantic:
In 1936, you could give birth and stay in the hospital for 11 days and pay less than $62:
#37 Not only are they gigantic, they are also extremely toxic. They only have a life of 5 years and then they are shredded and dumped into a toxic land fill, except for the occasional one that is repurposed to pass on their toxicity to people when made into park benches and other furniture as I've seen in previous posts.
interesting. ive seen a video where a guy found a hidden graveyard of 50 or so blades.
Still pretty cheap by today's standards...
you pay for hospitals? doesn´t it get expensive which so many school shootings per day?