What are some strange things that actually happened?! Have you ever heard of a jelly rain that fell over the town of Oakville? Or what about crop circles…..that happen underwater?! Find out about all the most interesting things that actually happen in this video! Follow me on Instagram HERE: https://instagram.com/_pablitos_way/ Subscribe to Pablito’s Way! http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCk2zuJeRutyMZSdoh0sltLA?sub_confirmation=1 New videos Monday through Friday! New to Pablito's Way? Start here! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC9umoxByMRJQoW_PzGK-n84iLQgbQyN2 Watch some of my favorite vids below….. Most Insane Mayweather Moments! https://youtu.be/bLko6Lcjib4 WEIRDEST Things Ever Found in Animals! https://youtu.be/2TH1Xbt8l-c 9 of the WORST diseases EVER! https://youtu.be/01M-uJccOBs The Hottest Female Athletes! https://youtu.be/S4p1_MQrKK4 11 Most Ridiculous Purchases by Floyd "Money" Mayweather! https://youtu.be/gjskIvCrG2Y Here are a few of the strangest things that actually happen! 9 - Glowing Sand Vacationers in destinations such as the Maldives are sometimes treated to a natural phenomenon that turns the night-time ocean into a field of glowing stars. As much as that sounds like an exaggeration, it’s really not! If waves break on the shore or bare feet step into the wet sand, a bright green-blue glow appears. This really cool looking effect is caused by bioluminescent plankton that often appears in warm coastal waters. Scientists have only recently discovered that this type of plankton glows when they’re moved because of stress, which is sorta unfortunate when you consider how relaxing the sight of the shimmering waves are when it’s completely dark out. Bioluminescence is used as a defense mechanism to draw predators towards the whatever it is trying eat the plankton. The tiny flashes of light also disorientate and surprise the predator. The plankton produce light using a chemical called luciferin. The process of creating a bioluminescent light, which is simply light produced within a living creature, differs between organisms. Some need a particular food or another creature for the effect to happen. But this type of plankton produces luciferin on its own. The light the tiny plankton emit is called ‘cold light’, because less than 20% of the light actually generates heat. Huge areas of the ocean can become populated by glowing plankton but the effect is especially common in warm-water lagoons that have narrow openings to the sea. 8 - Surreal Spider Webs If you hate spiders, you probably wanna skip forward for the next couple minutes. You’re about to hear about the silent army on the move in flooded New South Wales. At first glance, it looks like the fields have been blanketed with snow - but this ghostly white landscape in Australia is the work of MILLIONS of spiders! As flood waters raced past the town of Wagga Wagga, in New South Wales, the spiders were forced to clamber up trees and bushes, spinning their webs as they climbed. The result was this amazing panorama - glistening sheets of web covering just about everything in sight. Most of the branches were cocooned in the sticky webs, while the tall grasses looked as if they were covered in silk. When the residents of Wagga Wagga returned to their evacuated homes, they were obviously extremely surprised to find the fields surrounding their houses transformed, with their green grass covered in webs. So how’d the spiders do it? This is how the process actually goes: They throw out a thread of spider web from their body, they extend it into the air, the wind catches it and they take off and use it as a parachute. So the spiders literally floating on a parachute of their own body silk. The spiders then just jump off the web and go onto the ground and hide, so they use their web as a way of migrating. 7 - Underwater Crop Circles They’ve been called the crop circles of the ocean floor—seven-foot diameter patterned circles that were first spotted in 1995 off the coast of southern Japan. But their origin was a mystery, and local divers just basically called them “mystery circles.” The mystery persisted until 2011 when the artist finally emerged. A male pufferfish just five inches long, was finally caught in the act. So why do male pufferfish actually do this?! Apparently, female puffer fish are attracted by the grooves and ridges. After the male pufferfish make these circles for their ladies, they get down to business and then she lays her eggs in the center of these undersea circles. The research team observed a total of 10 construction events carried out by somewhere between 4 and 8 males.
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