Skip to main content
FactcoveryFactcovery
Search facts and topics…
HomeFactsTopicsRandomHistoryWeirdCultureFunGeographyAnimalsBiologyAstrologyNatureAstronomyEconomySpace
Home/Facts/Diamonds Have Been Discovered In Meteorites.
Diamonds Have Been Discovered In Meteorites.
Diamond

Diamonds Have Been Discovered In Meteorites.

Microscopic diamonds, known as nanodiamonds, are found in some meteorites, suggesting they can form in outer space, perhaps during asteroid impacts or within ancient stars. These cosmic diamonds offer clues about the early universe.

Source

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbonado

Details

Published
March 29, 2026
views
91
DiamondAstronomyGeologyWeirdMeteoritesNanodiamondsOuter SpaceCosmic DiamondsExtraterrestrialAsteroid Impact

Advertisement

Related Facts

Weird59 views

The Word 'Trivia' Comes from Latin for 'Three Roads'

In Latin, 'trivium' (tri + via = three + road) referred to the junction where three roads met — a crossroads or small public square where people gathered to gossip and exchange minor information. From this, 'trivialis' came to mean 'commonplace, found everywhere'. In the medieval curriculum, 'trivium' also named the three foundational liberal arts: grammar, rhetoric, and logic.

Weird56 views

Cats Have a Hidden Third Eyelid

Cats, like most birds, fish, reptiles, and amphibians, possess a nictitating membrane — a translucent third eyelid that moves horizontally across the eye from the inner corner. Normally hidden in healthy, alert cats, it becomes visible when a cat is drowsy, ill, or under stress. Humans lost this structure through evolution.

Weird52 views

Rubber Bands Last Longer When Stored in the Refrigerator

Natural rubber degrades primarily through oxidation — a chemical reaction with oxygen in the air. Cold temperatures significantly slow this process. According to van't Hoff's rule, every 10°C drop in temperature roughly halves the reaction rate. Storing rubber bands in the refrigerator (not the freezer) can extend their lifespan by years.

Weird55 views

The First Item Sold on eBay Was a Broken Laser Pointer

In 1995, Pierre Omidyar created 'AuctionWeb' (later renamed eBay) and listed a broken laser pointer as a test. It sold for $14.83. When he contacted the buyer to confirm they understood it was broken, the buyer replied: 'I'm a collector of broken laser pointers.' Omidyar called it the moment he realized there was an online market for everything.

Advertisement

✦ Factcovery

TopicsAboutPrivacyContactFeedback

© 2026 Factcovery. All rights reserved.