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Can You Sue Over 'Third-hand Smoke' Exposure?
people.howstuffworks.com/can-you-sue-thirdhand-smoke-exposure.htm
Could there be a day when people sue over tobacco residue left behind in a building's walls or carpet? HowStuffWorks investigates.
Elephants Can Learn to Sniff Out Landmines
animals.howstuffworks.com/mammals/elephants-can-learn-sniff-out-landmines.htm
Can elephants detect landmines with smell? Read the article to learn more about the landmine detection of elephants using their noses.
Hummingbird Migration Can Mean Flying 2,000 Miles Without a Break
animals.howstuffworks.com/birds/guess-how-far-a-hummingbird-can-fly-stopping-nope-its-farther.htm
Ruby-throated hummingbirds migrate annually from the U.S. all the way to Central America. How often would one need to stop? A new study reveals amazing abilities.
How Parking Garages Track Open Spaces, and Why They Often Get It Wrong
HowStuffWorks looks at the inexact science of keeping count in a parking garage.
Want to Define Poverty? Consider More Than Just Income, Study Says
money.howstuffworks.com/poverty-look-beyond-income.htm
A new study suggests poverty's more than just a number on a paycheck. Learn more in this HowStuffWorks Now article.
Where Did 'Shirt and Shoes Required' Come From?
people.howstuffworks.com/where-did-shirt-shoes-required-come.htm
Where did "no shirt, no shoes, no service" come from? Blame the hippies, says HowStuffWorks.
Are the Face Cards (Kings, Queens, Jacks) Real People?
history.howstuffworks.com/history-vs-myth/kings-queens-and-jacks-playing-cards-real-people.htm
Is that Henry VIII on the king of spades? If not, then who is it?
Moths Are Mother Nature's Secret Pollinators
animals.howstuffworks.com/insects/moths-as-pollinators.htm
Bees get a lot of credit for pollinating important food crops, but they get a lot of secret help from their nocturnal friends, the moths.
Commensalism: I Benefit, You Don't, but It's All Good
science.howstuffworks.com/life/biology-fields/commensalism.htm
Commensalism is a form of cooperation among species in which one species benefits from another without the first one suffering any harm from the relationship.
When Bad Watermelons Explode on Good People
recipes.howstuffworks.com/exploding-watermelon.htm
It's fairly rare, but a potentially catastrophic rind failure lurks under the green-striped shell of every seemingly innocent watermelon in the produce aisle.