The world's cleanest and clearest large body of water is the U.S.'s __. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Percentage of the Earth that's covered by oceans | 71 |
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| | Maximum ocean depth (in feet), found at the Pacific Ocean's Mariana Trench | 36,201 |
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| Estimated number of phytoplankton species in the world's oceans | 20,000 |
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| | Episode of "The Muppet Show" in which Kermit sings "It's Not Easy Bein' Green" | 219 |
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| Human eyes are most sensitive to the color green. |
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Human eyes can only perceive a small fraction of the electromagnetic spectrum. The visible spectrum, which excludes things like radio waves, X-rays, infrared, ultraviolet, and (very dangerous) gamma rays, stretches from around 380 nanometers (nm) to about 740 nm. Glimpse a rainbow — or recite the elementary school acronym ROYGBIV — and you'll notice that green lies right in the middle of our visual sweet spot. The color occupies around 520 to 565 nm, and the light sensitivity of the human eye in daytime peaks at about 555 nm, which is a green that's close to yellow. Because of this advantageous middle-of-the-road placement, the human eye can discern more shades of green than any other color. Since seeing green is also less of a strain on our visual system, the color positively affects our mood — essentially, our nervous system gets to relax. Green's innate ability to "placate and pacify" is one reason the hue can often be found in places of healing, especially hospitals. | |
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