I bet you didn't know about your body.

The body is an amazing “tempul”, is the only “home “permanent” of any life memory and experience. Despite much information about the body that we may have learned or understood during life, there are some very interesting ones you probably did not know: Every 10 years we have a whole new skeleton. [...]
The body is an amazing “tempul”, is the only “home “permanent” of any life memory and experience. Despite much information about the body that we may have learned or understood during life, there are some very interesting ones you probably did not know:
Every 10 years we have a whole new skeleton.
Cells of the skeleton system regenerate constantly and in 10 years our bones are, say, completely new. Of course, this phenomenon begins to slow down with age.
We're taller in the morning than at dinner.
It may seem surprising, but in fact at dinner we are shorter by the pressure on the knots that are caused during the day. As we continue with our day - to - day activities, this pressure causes the spinal cord to be pressed (certainly 3 cm) and relaxed (as in case of sleep) back to its original state.
Children grow faster in summertime.
A professor of pediatrics at a University of Nashville, according to their studies, has told CNN that raising children is related to the season. In summer they grow faster than in autumn-day, which is thought to have to do with the lack of muscle tension at normal/high temperatures.
Bones are stronger than steel.
The strongest bone in the body is femur bone, which can support the weight of an average person 30 times. This bone is part of the group of bones in the lower limbs, from thigh to knee.
The smallest bone in the body is in the ear, the tiny bone inside.
Fingers don't have muscles.
Any movement carried out on (or toe) is from tendons and bones, with the main aid of the palm muscles.
When we sleep.
One of the weirdest things hair does is to track our bedtime schedules. According to research, hair molecules that are rich in cells that contain ARN from <x0).8x1> (showing your sleeping-dehydration cycle) and that fact is reflected in your hair in the morning based on your hours of sleep.
Zorers are four times longer than our body.
The sneeze has a speed of 180 km/h and can reach up to 20 feet [6 m] away.
Every human is as hairy as a chimpanzee in spite of its volume or hair color.










