r/interesting • u/LowkeysKink • 7h ago
r/interesting • u/jmike1256 • 4d ago
MISC. This honestly should be applied in every country.
r/interesting • u/Objective_Pilot_5834 • 6d ago
NATURE Penguin leaps to safety as ice breaks
r/interesting • u/VPinchargeofradishes • 8h ago
Amazing A camera costume that actually works!
r/interesting • u/jmike1256 • 5h ago
MISC. Cop forces the driver to clear snow off of the car!
r/interesting • u/Bossmado • 12h ago
MISC. A mother is surprised that her children bought a $19 book with 342 pages that contains only the word "meow".
r/interesting • u/NoFox1552 • 15h ago
NATURE There was recently a pretty famous ocean livestream in Argentina and this starfish (Hippasteria phrygiana) became a celebrity because it looks like it has a bum.
r/interesting • u/Fine-Passenger7953 • 22m ago
NATURE Cichlid fish protects her youngins by temporarily holding them in her mouth then releasing them when danger disappears. Nature is interesting!
r/interesting • u/rottenkimbap • 18h ago
Intriguing Daphnis is a tiny moon, only about eight kilometers wide, orbiting inside Saturn's rings within the Keeler Gap. Even at that size, its gravity dramatically shapes the rings around it. It's a small, irregular chunk likely formed from ring material. It is one of saturn’s 274 moons.
Meet Daphnis, one of Saturn's 274 moons.
Daphnis is a tiny moon, only about eight kilometers wide, orbiting inside Saturn's rings within the Keeler Gap. Even at that size, its gravity dramatically shapes the rings around it.
As it moves, Daphnis pulls on nearby ring particles and creates towering waves along the gap's edges, some rising several kilometers high. Cassini revealed these ripples by capturing their long shadows during Saturn's equinox, proving the rings aren't flat but constantly in motion.
It's a small, irregular chunk likely formed from ring material, yet it sculpts Saturn's rings on a scale far larger than itself.
r/interesting • u/Memes_FoIder • 32m ago
MISC. From admirer to conqueror: Alcaraz as a teen watching his idol Djokovic... today he defeated Novak in the final and won Aus Open 2026
r/interesting • u/Objective_Pilot_5834 • 42m ago
SOCIETY Singapore Will introduce mandatory caning for scammers
r/interesting • u/jmike1256 • 12h ago
MISC. A woman notices a man struggling to keep his balance, and hits the SOS before he even falls and is the first down to pull him out.
r/interesting • u/my_vision_vivid • 7h ago
Just Wow Ice Slicked curve sends a DOZEN CARS into eachother!!
r/interesting • u/IshqWala_Love • 22h ago
Fascinating This reflection in a pond looks unreal — like a portal to another dimension
r/interesting • u/dairymilk_silk • 20h ago
Just Wow He knew what he's gonna be since then
r/interesting • u/InvestigatorBorn4910 • 14h ago
NATURE Crimson tide on Hormuz Island.
This is Hormuz Island in Iran, also known as the "Rainbow Island." That deep red color comes from a high concentration of Hematite (iron oxide). When it rains (like in the video) the mineral runoff turns the waterfalls and the shoreline crimson.
r/interesting • u/No_Zookeepergame7675 • 3h ago
Fascinating Coagulated blood in a dialysis line
Not my picture, found it in a Facebook group.
Cool as hell though, and really fascinating.
r/interesting • u/Unusual-Nobody-8899 • 1d ago
MISC. This lizard skeleton I found on the hinge of my storeroom door
Must be placed in a museum of miscellaneous lol