Want to link to an Indisputable Fact or Friday? By all means do so, but please do not convert videos from their original formats or post them to video hosting services like YouTube. I will request that they be removed.
About Me

Dan Serena
About Me
- Name: Dan Serena
Dan Serena is an internationally recognized intellectual. A dislike for pomp and love of the strange truth guide his research and drive him to inform others about our crazy and wonderful world.
Previous Posts
- Undeniable Friday: Instant Cat
- Undeniable Fact: Heads Up!
- Undeniable Update: Banana Safety Gallery
- Undeniable Fact: A leg to stand on
- Undeniable Fact: Ferocious Halitosis
- Undeniable Sunday Comics
- Undeniable Fact: Quack of all trades
- Undeniable Friday: The Floating Apple Trick
- Undeniable Fact: A Diamond in the Rough
- Undeniable Fact: A Close Shave
3 Comments:
Viruses aren't alive. Spiders are. Viruses can't possibly be spiders
they are, they have lots of legs, and are ugly and nasty, and are black too .
Get your undeniable facts straight heretic!
World’s smallest spider = an orbweb from Samoa (body 0.43 mm long, about the size of a pinhead).
A virus (Latin, poison) is a microscopic particle that can infect the cells of a biological organism. Viruses can only replicate themselves by infecting a host cell and therefore cannot reproduce on their own. At the most basic level, viruses consist of genetic material contained within a protective protein coat called a capsid; the existence of both genetic material and protein distinguishes them from other virus-like particles such as prions and viroids. They infect a wide variety of organisms: both eukaryotes (animals, fungi and plants) and prokaryotes (bacteria). A virus that infects bacteria is known as a bacteriophage, often shortened to phage. The study of viruses is known as virology, and those who study viruses are known as virologists.
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