Whatâs the weirdest thing you learned this week? Well, whatever it is, we promise youâll have an even weirder answer if you listen to PopSciâs hit podcast. The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week hits Apple, Spotify, YouTube, and everywhere else you listen to podcasts every-other Wednesday morning. Itâs your new favorite source for the strangest science-adjacent facts, figures, and Wikipedia spirals the editors of Popular Science can muster. If you like the stories in this post, we guarantee youâll love the show.
FACT: A seismic âdonkâ once rocked the world
By Sara Kiley WatsonÂ
On September 16, 2023, vibrations shook the entire worldâand didnât stop for nine days. The phenomenon started in East Greenland, but in the space of an hour, the strange hums had spread via the Earthâs crust and reached all the way to the other end of the world in Antarctica. Across the entire world, seismic monitoring stations, the ones we typically use to keep an eye on earthquakes and the like, started lighting up in response. But the noise that came through to the seismologists was nothing like the quick, car-crash-like noise that typically occurs with earthquakes. Instead, every 90 seconds, youâd hear this one âdonkââand it looked far from normal on a graph.Â
The cause? A domino-fall that started with climate change. A melting glacier could no longer support a mountaintop in a fjord in East Greenland, and when that mountain top came crashing down it created a mega-tsunami about 650 feet tall. That tsunami then created a rocking seiche, or a standing wave, which was stuck going back and forth inside the narrow fjord. This back and forth motion made the whole planet shake. Luckily, there were no casualties in this remote corner of the world, but itâs another spooky reminder of how climate change can make for strangeness that sends the whole world buzzing.Â
FACT: You probably canât make yourself immune to poisonÂ
By Trace DominguezÂ
One of my favorite questions we ever got on Thatâs Absurd, Please Elaborate came from a listener named Tessa on Spotify. She asked: How long would it have taken Wesley to build up his immunity to iocane powder? You know, that iconic scene in The Princess Brideâpoisoned wine, a battle of wits, one man drops dead, the other smugly reveals heâs been microdosing poison this whole time?
I went way too hard on this one. Like, 40-minutes-of-absurd-scientific-deep-dive hard. Because I had to know: could you actually do that? Could you really build up immunity to a poison?
This week on Weirdest Thing, I dig into the wild history of Mithridates VIâaka the Poison Kingâwho allegedly drank small amounts of poison daily to become immune (and yeah, probably was not a great dude). I break down the science of what poisons and venoms actually are, how they affect the body differently, and whether you can train your immune system to fight them off.
Spoiler: poisons like arsenic or cyanide mess with your body in ways you canât just âget used to.â But venomsâlike the kind from the insanely venomous inland taipan snake (which is, of course, Australian)ânow, thatâs a different story. Venoms trigger immune responses, meaning thereâs some basis for building toleranceâŠif youâre very careful.
To get the full deep dive on poison (and venom) immunity, check out my show Thatâs Absurd Please Elaborate.Â
FACT: Peeing might be contagious (in chimps)Â
By Rachel Feltman
Pee comes up pretty often on The Weirdest Thing I Learned This Week. Weâve talked about folks selling it. Weâve talked about doctors drinking it. Weâve talked about why you canât help but let it loose the second you get home from running errands. Weâve even talked about how some bugs can use âsuper propulsionâ to launch their urine out like little missiles. On this weekâs episode, weâre exploring that phenomenon where people get up to use the bathroom togetherâexcept in chimps.Â
A new study out of Japan has uncovered previously undocumented behavior in one of our closest animal relatives: contagious urination. Researchers at the Kumamoto Sanctuary observed 20 captive chimpanzees for more than 600 hours, recording over 1,300 individual urination events. They found a statistically significant phenomenon of chimps being more likely to pee right after seeing other chimps go.
This clustering of urination events wasnât random. Chimps were more likely to pee if they were within visual range of a peer whoâd just done the same, and higher-ranking individuals were more likely to set off a chain reaction. Surprisingly, though, the likelihood of simultaneous peeing didnât seem to depend on how socially close the chimps were, which sets this behavior apart from better-known contagious behaviors like yawning.
Contagious yawning, common in humans and other social animals, is thought to be linked to social bonding, empathy, and group coordinationâbut the evolutionary driver behind contagious peeing remains unclear. The researchers offered a few ideas: it might be a way of preparing for a group activity (âeveryone go before we get back on the road!â), or it could help keep scent markers concentrated in one place, reducing the chances of predators catching a whiff. But we canât know for sure!Â