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This is a selection of recently created new articles and greatly expanded former stub articles on Wikipedia that were featured on the Main Page as part of Did you know? You can submit new pages for consideration. (Archives are in sets of 50–100 items each.)
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Please add the line *'''''~~~~~''''' at the top for the newly posted set of archived hooks. This page should be archived once a week, anytime on a Friday. Thanks.
- 19:31, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Blue Tilapia (pictured) have become the most widespread foreign fish in Florida waters since their introduction in 1961, and are now a serious management problem in Everglades National Park?
- ... that the Doctor Who episode "The Stolen Earth" features cameo appearances by evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins and comedian Paul O'Grady?
- ... that Art Ross, the first head coach of the Boston Bruins, served four stints as head coach?
- ... that 29 Norwegian civilians were shot in reprisal by the Nazi regime in Norway following the Norwegian resistance's assassination of police chief Karl Marthinsen in February of 1945?
- ... that the San Fernando Building in Los Angeles, California, recently converted into upscale lofts, was raided several times for illegal gambling operations between 1910 and 1930?
- ... that the 1946 earthquake in Nankaidō, Japan caused a 6-meter (20-ft) tsunami that destroyed 2,100 homes?
- ... that lyric coloratura soprano Harolyn Blackwell replaced opera diva Kathleen Battle when she famously got fired from the Metropolitan Opera?
- 18:30, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the sittellas (pictured) of Australasia were once thought to be nuthatches but are now considered their own family?
- ... that the best result of German motorcycle rider Georg Braun, a second place, was achieved in a wet race in the 1954 Swiss motorcycle Grand Prix at Circuit Bremgarten?
- ... that the Missouri University of Science and Technology Nuclear Reactor, built in 1961, was the first nuclear reactor in the U.S. state of Missouri?
- ... that the Durga Vahini, the women's wing of the Vishva Hindu Parishad, have been accused of instigating violence against religious minorities in India?
- ... that the 2100 series of the Keihin Electric Express Railway produces a "do-re-mi-fa-so-la-ti-do" tune when its propulsion system starts up?
- ... that when wrestler George Scott and his brother Sandy were in Australia, they won the IWA World Tag Team Championship three times between 1966 and 1968?
- ... that units in LA's Avenel Cooperative Housing Project, reportedly built as "a cooperative living experiment for a group of communists", were selling for US$300,000 in 2002?
- 08:46, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the modern coat of arms of Russia (pictured) was designed by a former political prisoner, Yevgeny Ukhnalyov?
- ... that San Francisco indie rock band LoveLikeFire formed as a result of a Craigslist classified advertisement?
- ... that Karl Wahl, in 1954, was the first former Nazi Gauleiter to publish his autobiography after having received permission from the denazification authorities to do so?
- ... that a revolution in burrowing marks the base of the Cambrian period, and is followed by the Cambrian explosion of animal diversity?
- ... that Arthur Barret, the twenty-second mayor of St. Louis, Missouri, died after serving only eleven days in office?
- ... that Dibeen Forest Reserve, established in 2004, is the newest nature reserve in Jordan?
- ... that at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, basketballer Danny Morseu was the first Torres Strait Islander to represent Australia at the Olympic games?
- 03:55, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Hygrocybe coccinea (pictured) is a bright red edible mushroom that grows in the grasslands of Europe and under Rhododendron in Nepal?
- ... that Silas D. Alben proposed a model for more efficient turbine blades based on the bumpy flippers of humpback whales?
- ... that age controversies in gymnastics once resulted in the North Korean women's team being banned from the World Championships?
- ... that the song "Shake a Fist" was almost included on the British electropop band Hot Chip's second album, The Warning, instead of their third?
- ... that Albert Anker is sometimes called the "national painter" of Switzerland because of his popular depictions of 19th century Swiss village life?
- ... that the United Nations Institute for Namibia, established in 1976 in Lusaka, Zambia, sought to promote Namibian independence as well as educate Namibians for after independence was achieved?
- ... that only a year after being established by car dealership owner Giuseppe Risi, the Risi Competizione team won their class at the 1998 24 Hours of Le Mans?
- 21:53, 2 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Caeca et Obdurata, promulgated by Pope Clement VIII (pictured) in 1593, ordered that Jews be expelled from the Papal States except Rome, Ancona, and the Comtat Venaissin, within three months?
- ... that Toledo Mud Hens relief pitcher Ian Ostlund is one of only two people in Virginia high school history to strike out the side in every inning of a complete game?
- ... that Russula nigricans is an edible fungus which turns red, then grey, and finally black on bruising or cutting?
- ... that the Valmet Nr II tram of the Helsinki tram network was redesigned to include air conditioning in the cockpit after a driver fainted in the summer heat and killed a motorcyclist in a collision?
- ... that The Voice of the Turtle, the ninth longest-running play in Broadway history, derives its name from a verse in the Bible’s Song of Solomon?
- ... that philanthropist Bilquis Edhi, who helped save 16,000 babies, has been nicknamed "Mother of Pakistan"?
- ... that International Surfing Day originated in 2004 to celebrate the sport of surfing and clean up beaches?
- ... that the Calabasas, California facilities for the private elementary school New Village Academy is funded by actor Will Smith?
- 14:36, 2 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the "Livingstone Tree" in Nkhotakota, Malawi, was never visited by David Livingstone (statue pictured), though when he travelled there he famously stopped under another tree?
- ... that Buddy West was chief legislative advocate for the University of Texas of the Permian Basin at Odessa?
- ... that Castleshaw Roman fort in Greater Manchester was a Roman fort built in 79 AD replaced by a smaller fortlet before being abandoned in the 120s?
- ... that Detroit Tigers pitcher Eddie Bonine played for three different colleges in three different states before he turned professional?
- ... that hundreds of political prisoners were freed in numerous raids on communist prisons in Poland between 1944 and 1946?
- ... that Kemar Roach played in his first Twenty20 match against Australia and finished with the best bowling figures of the match?
- ... that burials took place for almost 60 years at the site before Monfort Cemetery in Port Washington, New York was officially set aside for that purpose?
- ... that Bethany Black has been described as "Britain's only goth, lesbian, transsexual comedian"?
- 08:55, 2 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Arthur Bingham was commander of HMS Little Belt, when the Little Belt Affair (pictured) occurred in 1811?
- ... that the first modern time capsule was Thornwell Jacobs’ Crypt of Civilization at Oglethorpe University, Atlanta, Georgia, due to be opened May 28, 8113?
- ... that coffee production in Costa Rica in the 19th century created enough revenue to build the National Theater in the capital San José?
- ... that the title for Christian musician Matthew West’s album Something to Say had already been decided before he knew that he would have to be vocally silent for two months?
- ... that the Dorado Group is one of the richest galaxy clusters in the Southern Hemisphere and thought to be unvirialized which could explain its abundance of H I and spirals?
- ... that the painter Cuno Amiet, a pioneer of modern art in Switzerland, created more than a thousand self-portraits?
- ... that the journey described in Eat, Pray, Love, a memoir by Elizabeth Gilbert, was financed by an advance on the book she planned to write about the trip?
- 21:06, 1 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that Boston Celtics head coaches Red Auerbach (pictured) and Bill Fitch were named to the list of the Top 10 Coaches in NBA history?
- ... that German politician Käte Strobel broke a taboo in 1967 by promoting sex education with a school book and the government-sponsored film Helga?
- ... that almost all Pakistani pop music videos were forbidden to air on local television after Zia-ul-Haq's military coup in 1977?
- ... that Adam Raphael was named Journalist of the Year in the British Press Awards of 1973 for a Guardian series on labour conditions in South Africa?
- ... that future King Henry IV of England and Marshal of France Jean Le Maingre took part in the Lithuanian Civil War?
- ... that Ontario politician Jan Dukszta, a psychiatrist by training, took time out of his 1981 re-election campaign to treat colleague Tony Lupusella who was suffering a nervous breakdown?
- ... that Native Americans in Nebraska who live on reservations generally do not pay State of Nebraska taxes?
- ... that French cartographer Jacques Bertin was the first to provide a theoretical foundation to Information Visualization?
- 16:50, 1 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the exact species for which the fish genus Carangoides (C. orthogrammus pictured) was originally created is unknown?
- ... that in the 1800s, Chichester, Quebec claimed to have the largest wooden locks in Canada, built as part of a scheme to encourage boat travel on the upper Ottawa River?
- ... that the 2008 film Meerkat Manor: The Story Begins uses "meerkats actors" to depict the Whiskers and Lazuli groups rather than using actual footage of the real meerkats?
- ... that Bert Freeman was the top scorer in the English Football League in three seasons before 1914?
- ... that Hexaware Technologies Limited is ranked as India’s 11th top IT service provider by NASSCOM since 2005?
- ... that Scottish missionary Carstairs Douglas compiled the first comprehensive Amoy-English Dictionary in 1873, which, with revisions, is still in use today?
- ... that in 1298, Pope Boniface VIII decreed in Periculoso that nuns "ought henceforth to remain perpetually cloistered in their monasteries"?
- ... that the prosecution of Dr. Leonard Arthur for the murder of a Down's syndrome baby led to a change in British law regarding the disclosure of technical evidence?
- 13:18, 1 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that George Hargreaves, Christian Party candidate in the forthcoming UK Parliamentary by-election, has said that the dragon symbol on the Welsh flag (pictured) is "nothing less than the sign of Satan"?
- ... that the Stonerose fossil site contains the earliest known records of Rosaceae, the rose family?
- ... that velology is the study of vehicle tax discs?
- ... that all four stars of Starved, an FX sitcom about eating disorders, struggled with eating disorders themselves, a fact unknown to producers until after casting?
- ... that the design of Notre-Dame-des-Missions-du-cygne d'Enghien in Épinay-sur-Seine, France was inspired by the architectural styles of five continents?
- ... that Pakistani actress Maria Wasti played a role depicting philanthropist and Lenin Peace Prize winner Bilquis Edhi?
- ... that boxer Oscar De La Hoya has been involved in efforts to redevelop the Sears, Roebuck & Company Mail Order Building in the Boyle Heights neighborhood where he grew up?
- ... that Leves were Roman soldiers armed with javelins?
- 06:14, 1 July 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the French Protestant Church in Brighton (pictured), one of only two in England, is expected to close this year?
- ... that anthropologist David Zolotarev’s 1930 study of the ethnic tribes of the northern Russian Lake Imandra region determined they did not understand Soviet-style "socialist construction"?
- ... that the Miss Great Britain Party is a British political movement which campaigns to make politics "sexy not sleazy"?
- ... that a 3D model artist for The Matrix Reloaded went on to participate in the fangame project Chrono Resurrection?
- ... that Vin americanii! ("The Americans are coming!") was a slogan used by Romanians in the 1940s and '50s to express their hope that a US intervention would topple the Communist regime?
- ... that a Jueju, a type of Chinese poem, is a quatrain with either five or seven characters per line?
- ... that in the six months after the Beerhouse Act was passed in England in 1830, nearly 25,000 new licenses to open pubs, taverns and alehouses were issued?
- ... that D'Oyly Carte Opera Company star Donald Adams could only perform in his own Gilbert and Sullivan for All theatre group on his nights off?
- ... that the 1971 film Sentinels of Silence featured Orson Welles narrating the English version and Ricardo Montalban narrating the Spanish version?
- 19:15, 30 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that "squash and stretch" (example pictured) is considered the most important of the 12 basic principles of animation?
- ... that the Ralph J. Bunche House in South Los Angeles was the boyhood home of Ralph Bunche, the first person of color to receive the Nobel Peace Prize?
- ... that the extinct sea turtle Psephophorus was once mistaken as an ancient armadillo due to the specimen's poor condition?
- ... that Welsh footballer Roy Clarke played in three different divisions of the Football League in three consecutive matches?
- ... that Leonide Massine wrote the choreography and the libretto for the ballet La Boutique fantasque and also danced in the lead role?
- ... that, in order to prevent storage of nuclear waste in Utah's Skull Valley, the main county road through the valley became State Route 196 in 1998?
- ... that the Treaty of Salynas in 1398 marked the third time that Vytautas the Great granted Samogitia to the Teutonic Knights in 14 years?
- ... that the original building of Trondheim Central Station in Norway has been preserved as a cultural heritage?
- 18:48, 30 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that as part of Operation Noble Eagle (service badge pictured), Canada provided air defense protection for the Super Bowl XL?
- ... that Marie Studholme, one of the popular postcard beauties of Edwardian musical comedy, was wooed by her wealthy second husband under an assumed name?
- ... that Norsk Transport has operated four railway ferries on Lake Tinnsjå in Norway?
- ... that in 1885, Bug Holliday became the first baseball player to make his Major League debut in post-season play?
- ... that American actress Kim Stanley was cast in the starring role of the 1964 British film Séance on a Wet Afternoon after Deborah Kerr and Simone Signoret turned down the part?
- ... that Rupprecht Gerngroß is considered the leader of the only successful putsch against Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany?
- ... that the Vadigo, a species of carangid fish, is believed to be expanding its range in the Mediterranean Sea?
- ... that William D. Washington became the first faculty member of the Virginia Military Institute to die during his tenure there?
- 06:39, 30 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that education in Sierra Leone (pictured) had to recover from the destruction of 1,270 primary schools during the Sierra Leone Civil War?
- ... that 17th-century French lawyer Antoine Le Maistre gave up a promising career and established a Jansenist group of ascetics known as Les Solitaires, the Hermits?
- ... that the Halegannada, literally "old Kannada", is an ancient form of the Kannada language?
- ... that the Hortus conclusus or "enclosed garden" was both a title and attribute of Mary and a type of actual garden?
- ... that minor league baseball pitcher Kyle Pearson’s 17 losses with the Hickory Crawdads tied him for the all-time team lead?
- ... that the term Sindhology as a subject of knowledge about Sindh was first coined in 1964?
- ... that after moving to Los Angeles, California in 1912 as a widow with two daughters, Florence Casler became a pioneering woman real estate developer, constructing more than 60 buildings?
- ... that a Bird Flu pre-pandemic vaccine called Pandemrix is the first to be approved by the EU for the inoculation of populations in the early stages of a bird flu pandemic?
- 18:12, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the missionary and explorer David Livingstone named Cape Maclear, Malawi (pictured) after his friend, the astronomer Thomas Maclear?
- ... that the musical group The Wiggles' first album was dedicated to their general operations manager Paul Field's infant daughter, whose death ultimately led to the formation of the group?
- ... that the town of Ollantaytambo, which dates back to the Inca Empire, has some of the oldest continuously occupied dwellings in South America?
- ... that the 1.3-mile (2.1 km) avenue of trees leading to Marchmont House in Scotland was begun 24 years before the house itself was built, with the planting of 10,000 Dutch elms?
- ... ... that one critic claims Christopher Smart's The Hilliad as the "loudest broadside" of the Paper War of 1752-1753, a literary dispute involving Henry Fielding, John Hill, and many others?
- ... that most of the illuminated manuscripts created by William de Brailes in Oxford in the 13th century are about the size of a modern paperback?
- 13:51, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that pop singer Madonna (pictured) adopted a 13-month-old boy from Mchinji, Malawi in October 2006, causing international controversy?
- ... that Sancaktar Hayrettin Mosque had been an Eastern Orthodox monastery until it was converted after the Fall of Constantinople?
- ... that the Iowa Blue breed of chicken is not actually blue according to poultry standards?
- ... that Karl Wahl, the leader of the Nazi Gau Schwaben, was the only Bavarian Gauleiter without a university degree?
- ... that tricho-hepato-enteric syndrome is a rare disease presenting as intractable diarrhea, facial abnormalities and woolly, brittle hair in infants with growth retardation in the womb?
- ... that in the 2000–01 National Basketball Association playoffs, Allen Iverson played an average of 46.2 minutes a game, leading the Eastern Conference?
- ... that lyric tenor Evan Gorga, who created the role of Rodolfo in the original production of Giacomo Puccini's opera La bohème, reprised the role in several productions, then retired at the age of 34?
- ... that the design of the first-generation Ford Taurus was so ahead of its time that it was chosen to be used in the 1987 science fiction film RoboCop?
- 09:48, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the Siamese method (example pictured) is a simple method for creating magic squares, which was brought to France in 1688 following Simon de la Loubère's embassy to Siam?
- ... that drag entertainer José Sarria was the first openly gay candidate for public office in the United States, garnering some 6,000 votes in his 1961 campaign for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors?
- ... that the Mississaugas of the Credit Mission sent Chief Peter Jones to England where he petitioned Queen Victoria directly for title deeds to their lands?
- ... that Maurice Durand designed the lighthouses at the Île d'Yeu and the Pointe du Grouin du Cou in France to replace earlier structures that had been destroyed during World War II?
- ... that Bruno Fonseca's paintings The War Murals, inspired by violence in Eastern Europe, have been called "the most powerful statement of their kind since Picasso's great Guernica"?
- ... that British and American mountain men who met at Mountain Green, Utah in 1825 argued over rights to the land, which was actually Mexican territory?
- ... that the statue The Naked Truth, in Compton Hill Reservoir Park, was made of bronze instead of white marble to deemphasize the nudity?
- 03:18, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that hwajeon (pictured) is a sweet Korean pancake or rice cake made of edible flower petals, glutinous rice flour, and sugar?
- ... that the dates of birth and death of the Ukrainian music theorist and composer Nikolay Diletsky remain unknown?
- ... that with an area of deep convection near the center, Hurricane Ivo reached peak intensity of 80 miles per hour (130 km/h) on September 20, 2007?
- ... that the 1971 Turkish coup d'état was carried out by a memorandum rather than direct intervention by the military?
- ... that Radio Londres, a Free French radio broadcast from London to Nazi occupied France, read Paul Verlaine's poem Chanson d'automne as a code to inform the resistance that Operation Overlord was about to take place?
- ... that the 1914 film In the Land of the Head Hunters was the first feature-length film whose cast was composed entirely of Native North Americans?
- ... that in On the Sphere and Cylinder, Archimedes expressed the volume contained in a sphere in terms of that of a cylinder?
- ... that Cardinal Uberto Crivelli was elected Pope Urban III in the papal election in 1185 within the few hours after the death of his predecessor Lucius III?
- 19:26, 28 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that the tartan of Nova Scotia (pictured) was originally designed by Bessie Murray for an agricultural exhibition in 1953, but was so admired that it was later officially adopted by the province?
- ... that Polish resistance courier Maria Kotarba became an "Angel of Auschwitz" by smuggling food and medicine, caring and cooking for Jewish prisoners in hiding?
- ... that the Erie Railroad bought the Dodge-Greenleaf House in Otisville, New York for US$5 and sold it two years later for US$1?
- ... that the extensive use of social networking in the Philippines allowed the Cebu City police to identify two murder suspects by checking into their Friendster profiles?
- ... that New Mexico philanthropist Addie Peed Swearingen was a beautician for 28 years in Santa Fe before she and her husband made a fortune in petroleum and natural gas leases?
- ... that Nagpur Improvement Trust, a local civic government body of Nagpur, India established in 1936, is not an elected body and continues to work along side Nagpur Municipal Corporation?
- ... that the sailing-ship Lwów was the first ship under Polish banner to cross the equator?
- ... that television commercials for the furniture company Walter E. Smithe have included parodies of Star Wars and The Apprentice?
- 13:24, 28 June 2008 (UTC)
- ... that a local writers' group won a preservation award for renovating the Philipse Manor train station (pictured) in Sleepy Hollow, New York?
- ... that Indian scholar Śāntarakṣita is believed to have been instrumental in the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet?
- ... that American Revolutionary war officer Anthony Wayne's bones are buried at St. David's Episcopal Church in Pennsylvania, while the rest of him is buried hundreds of miles away in Erie, Pennsylvania?
- ... that the Jordan River Foundation was founded by Queen Rania al-Abdullah of Jordan?
- ... that the birth of public radio broadcasting was a live concert from the Metropolitan Opera House with Enrico Caruso as one of the opera singers?
- ... that with the inception of the Gauliga Ostmark in 1938, clubs from outside of Vienna were for the first time permitted to take part in Austria's premier football division?
- ... that the birth rates of the Southern Woolly Lemur are affected by the degradation level of their habitat?
- ... that American children's literature author Howard Pease, who often set his stories on tramp freighters, himself shipped out when he needed new material?
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