Stories for REMORANDOM

Tree of 40 Fruit

Tree of 40 Fruit

  Almost all fruit trees are grafted, because the seed of a fruit tree is a genetic variant of the parent and would bear genetically different fru...

Tree of 40 Fruit

  Almost all fruit trees are grafted, because the seed of a fruit tree is a genetic variant of the parent and would bear genetically different fru...
Whales Sleeping

Whales Sleeping

  There are a few things you should know about whales sleeping. The first is how they breathe. Whales are voluntary breathers, which means they co...

Whales Sleeping

  There are a few things you should know about whales sleeping. The first is how they breathe. Whales are voluntary breathers, which means they co...
Ambiguous Images 1

Ambiguous Images 1

  Ambiguous images create ambiguity by exploiting graphic similarities and other properties of visual system interpretation between two or more di...

Ambiguous Images 1

  Ambiguous images create ambiguity by exploiting graphic similarities and other properties of visual system interpretation between two or more di...
World's Smelliest Smell

World's Smelliest Smell

  Methanethiol (aka methyl mercaptan) is a colourless gas with a distinctive and putrid smell. While the organosulfur compound thioacetone is gene...

World's Smelliest Smell

  Methanethiol (aka methyl mercaptan) is a colourless gas with a distinctive and putrid smell. While the organosulfur compound thioacetone is gene...
Rotating Snakes

Rotating Snakes

  "Rotating Snakes" is a visual illusion that gives the impression of continuous motion in what is actually a static image. It was created in 2003...

Rotating Snakes

  "Rotating Snakes" is a visual illusion that gives the impression of continuous motion in what is actually a static image. It was created in 2003...
The Smell of Rain

The Smell of Rain

  You know that smell, right? The phenomenon was first scientifically described in a 1964 paper by Australian researchers Isabel Bear and Dick Tho...

The Smell of Rain

  You know that smell, right? The phenomenon was first scientifically described in a 1964 paper by Australian researchers Isabel Bear and Dick Tho...
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