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Encyclopedia-style articles for every topic on TruthOrBluff, written at four reading levels: Rookie (8+), Curious (12+), Sharp (16+), and Expert (18+). Every claim is sourced; many are independently fact-checked by AI reviewers.
Animals & Wildlife
Ocean Life
Sharks
450 million years of evolution made the ocean's most perfect predator.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Dolphins
They sleep with one eye open, call each other by name, and might be smarter than we think.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Octopuses
Three hearts, blue blood, nine brains, and the ability to squeeze through almost anything.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Sea Turtles
Seven living species, an internal compass tuned to Earth's magnetic field, and ancestors that swam with the dinosaurs.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Great White Shark
The ocean's most famous predator: 20 feet (6 m) long, 300 serrated teeth, and a sense of smell that can detect one drop of blood in 25 gallons (100 L) of water.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Popular Pets
Insects & Arachnids
Prehistoric Life
Science & Discovery
Space & Astronomy
Black Holes
Where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Mars
The Red Planet has the tallest mountain and deepest canyon in the solar system.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Moon
Footprints there will last 100 million years, because there's no wind to blow them away.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Visible Universe
93 billion light-years across, two trillion galaxies, and expanding faster than light.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Milky Way Galaxy
Our home galaxy: 100,000 light-years across, hundreds of billions of stars, and a supermassive black hole at its heart.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Stars
Born in nebulae, fusing 1.3 trillion pounds (600 billion kg) of hydrogen per second, dying as white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes. The engines of the universe.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Sun
A G2V yellow dwarf 93 million miles away, fusing 600 million tons of hydrogen every second. Our local star, and the source of nearly all of Earth's energy.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Human Body
The Brain
100 billion neurons, unlimited storage capacity, and it uses more energy than any other organ.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Heart
It beats 100,000 times a day and pumps enough blood to fill a swimming pool every week.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Bones & Skeleton
You were born with 300 bones, but adults only have 206. Where did the others go?
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Physics & Particles
The Standard Model
Seventeen fundamental particles describe everything you've ever seen, touched, or breathed.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
CERN & the LHC
A 27 km ring under France and Switzerland where protons collide at 99.9999991% the speed of light.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Matter & Antimatter
Every particle has an evil twin, and the universe somehow ended up with more of one than the other.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Speed of Light
299,792,458 meters per second is more than a speed limit. It's the cosmic rule nothing with mass can break.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Relativity & Motion
Bounce a tennis ball. By the time it lands, you've moved millions of miles. Welcome to reference frames.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Gravity & Gravitational Waves
Einstein bent spacetime. LIGO heard the ripples. The graviton, if it exists, has eluded every detector ever built.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
The Nature of Mass
Atoms are 99.9999% empty space. 99% of your weight is binding energy. Mass is what energy looks like when it stops moving.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Quantum Mechanics
The framework that breaks classical intuition: wave-particle duality, uncertainty, entanglement, and the strange machinery that makes the universe possible.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Earth Science
Volcanoes
There's a supervolcano under Yellowstone, and over 1,500 potentially active volcanoes worldwide.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Lightning
Five times hotter than the surface of the Sun, and it strikes Earth 100 times every second.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Earthquakes
Earth's crust is broken into a dozen tectonic plates that grind past each other, releasing energy that has reshaped continents and toppled cities for millions of years.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
History & Civilization
Ancient World
Ancient Egypt
The Great Pyramid was the tallest building on Earth for 3,800 years.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Roman Empire
They had concrete better than ours, heated floors, and a road network that lasted millennia.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Ancient Greece
Hundreds of independent city-states that gave us democracy, philosophy, the Olympic Games, and the alphabet behind these very words.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Mummies
Egyptian embalmers spent 70 days drying bodies in natron salt and wrapping them in 4,000 yards of linen, but mummification has been practiced on every inhabited continent.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Mythology & Legends
Exploration & Adventure
Geography & Places
Extreme Environments
Deepest Oceans
The Mariana Trench is so deep that if you dropped Mount Everest into it, the peak would still be underwater.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Tallest Mountains
Everest isn't actually the tallest mountain. It depends on how you measure.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Amazing Places
Wonders of the World
Only one of the original Seven Wonders still exists. Can you guess which?
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Mount Everest
29,031.69 ft (8,848.86 m) above sea level on the Nepal-China border, first summited in 1953, growing about 4 mm taller each year, and burial place of more than 340 climbers.
1 reading level: Sharp
Food & Drink
Sweet Science
Chocolate
It was currency, medicine, and a bitter drink before it was ever a candy bar.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Honey & Bees
Honey never expires. Archaeologists found 3,000-year-old honey that's still edible.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Ice Cream
From ancient Persian ice pits to a 24-ton record sundae, the surprising science and history of the world's favorite frozen dessert.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Ingredients & Origins
Hot Peppers & Spice
The world's hottest pepper can literally make you hallucinate.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Coffee
From a 15th-century Yemeni Sufi monastery to 2 billion cups a day, the bean that fueled empires, revolutions, and the modern workday.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Arts & Entertainment
Sports
Olympic Records
From ancient Greece to modern Games, an authoritative tour through Olympic history's strangest records.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Unusual Sports
Cheese rolling, wife carrying, and chess boxing. The world's strangest competitions.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Soccer / Football
The world's most popular sport: 4 billion fans, 8 World Cup-winning nations, and a 173,000-strong crowd at the 1950 final in Rio.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
Basketball
Invented by James Naismith in December 1891 with peach baskets and a soccer ball. Today, an Olympic sport with over 450 million players worldwide.
4 reading levels: Rookie · Curious · Sharp · Expert
American Football
32 NFL teams, an annual Super Bowl watched by tens of millions, and a sport whose 11-man rules go back to Walter Camp at Yale in 1880.
1 reading level: Sharp