• galler12There is enough water in Lake Superior to cover all North and South America in one foot of liquid.
  • galler13There's a town in Washington with treetop bridges made specifically to help squirrels cross the street.
  • galler14In 1872, Russia sold Alaska to the Unites States for about 2 cents per acre.
  • galler15It would take you more than 400 years to spend a night in all of Las Vegas's hotel rooms.
  • galler16Western Michigan is home to a giant lavender labyrinth so big you can see it on Google Earth.
  • galler17There's an island full of wild monkeys off the coast of South Carolina called Morgan Island , and it's not open to humans.
  • galler18There's enough concrete in the Hoover Dam to build a two-lane highway from San Francisco to New York City .
  • galler19Arizona and Hawaii are now the only states that don't observe daylight savings time.
  • galler20Boston has the worst drivers out of the nation's 200 largest cities. Kansas City has the best drivers.
  • galler21Kansas produces enough wheat each year to feed everyone in the world for about two weeks.
  • galler22Oregon's Crater Lake is deep enough to cover six Statues of Liberty stacked on top of each other.
  • galler23The Empire State building has its own zip code.
  • galler24The Los Angeles Coroner's Office has its own quirky gift shop called Skeletons in the Closet.
  • galler25The Library of Congress contains approximately 838 miles of bookshelves long enough to stretch from Houston to Chicago.
  • galler26Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubruagungamaugg in Massachusetts has 46 letters and is the longest place name in the U.S. (even though it's based on a joke).
  • galler27The entire Denver International Airport is twice the size of Manhattan.>
  • galler28In 1893, an amendment was proposed to rename the country to the ' United States of Earth'.
  • galler29A highway in Lancaster, California plays the 'William Tell Overture' as you drive over it, thanks to some well-placed grooves in the road.
  • galler30The total length of Idaho's rivers could stretch across the United States about 40 times.

 

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