SCIENCE FACT OF THE DAY • Cats 'n Dogs

in science •  7 years ago  (edited)

...and nobody knows why! 

There's a known case of  a cat walking 2,000 miles across Australia to get home after its owners moved to a new house! I'm not even kidding. The cat, which was named Jessie, relocated with her owners from South Australia to a new home in the Northern Territory. After a few weeks, Jessie was nowhere to be found and her owners thought they'd lost her. More than a year later, the new residents of their old home found a strange cat hanging around, which turned out to be Jessie! Pretty amazing, right?

If you're interested and want to learn more about the relationship between cats and dogs, click here.

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Source
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2058630/Cat-walks-2-000-miles-Australia-home-owners-relocate.html#ixzz4wgfhyMKM
Picture taken from pixabay.com and edited by myself
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The Ancient Egyptian word for cat was mau, which means "to see".

Thanks for the interesting fact!

When a family cat died in ancient Egypt, family members would mourn by shaving off their eyebrows. They also held elaborate funerals during which they drank wine and beat their breasts. The cat was embalmed with a sculpted wooden mask and the tiny mummy was placed in the family tomb or in a pet cemetery with tiny mummies of mice.

Isaac Newton invented the cat flap. Newton was experimenting in a pitch-black room. Spithead, one of his cats, kept opening the door and wrecking his experiment. The cat flap kept both Newton and Spithead happy.

Tabby cats are thought to get their name from Attab, a district in Baghdad, now the capital of Iraq.

Female cats are \polyestrous

Phoenician cargo ships are thought to have brought the first domesticated cats to Europe in about 900 BC.