Curiosities
ADVERTIsem*nT
While our lives are affected by things happening around us each and every day, some of the strongest influences on a societal level are often new inventions or groundbreaking discoveries; and needless to say, there have been quite a few of them in history, and rather significant ones, too.
However, what’s not as evident is the fact that some of them were stumbled upon completely by accident. Members of the ‘Ask Reddit’ community have recently discussed such dumb luck discoveries and inventions, after one of them asked fellow netizens about things that would still likely be undiscovered today if it wasn’t for sheer luck. Redditors covered all sorts of instances, so if you’re burning with curiosity to learn more about them, wait no longer and scroll down to find the stories on the list below.
Image credits: Inside-Line
This post may include affiliate links.
#1
Most of the major ones honestly would have been discovered one way or another sooner or later, so I'm got to say something a little more obscure: There was once a dude who had the idea for a universal glue, one that would stick to anything - glass, wood, plastic, metal, any two solids that needed to be glued together. A lot of experimentation ensued; many ~~convincing~~ combinations of ingredients were tested, most subsequently rejected. Eventually, one substance was discovered. Would it stick to metal? Check. Glass? Check. Paper? Check. Plastic? Check. Wood? Check. Ceramics? Check. Skin even?? Still Check! And this glue was not only nigh universal, but the connection was instant, and the glue did not degrade by being exposed to air. And the connection it formed had the strength of... a wet tissue... It was sticky all right, but rather useless for holding anything much heavier than a piece of paper, and even that could be trivially pulled off by a young child. It was absolutely useless for anything that wanted to be secured. No amount of tampering would make this glue strong enough to be used for anything that wanted to stay glued. ... One quick rebranding later and the Post-It note was born.
AutisticPenguin2 , aboodi vesakaran / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
123points
POST
Marie Dahme Marie Dahme Community Member Follow
No, that can't be right. Like, I'm pretty sure Romey and Michelle invented post it notes. Lol
Vote comment up
119points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#2
Reverse transcriptase which led to the development of hiv treatment was discovered by pure luck and the casual experimentation of a medical doctor and his friend in their basem*nt lab because they enjoyed scientific research. The guy then later helped develop the first hep c vaccine. Really cool story though.
throw1away9932s , Polina Tankilevitch / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
105points
POST
and_a_touch_of_the_’tism and_a_touch_of_the_’tism Community Member Follow
Their names were Howard Temin and David Baltimore
Vote comment up
70points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTIsem*nT
#3
Im surprised I haven’t seen this one yet, but LSD was discovered on accident. Or at least its psychedelic effects were. In 1938 a chemist named Albert Hoffman who worked for a pharmaceutical company was trying to synthesize a respiratory and circulatory stimulant from the fungus ergot. After syntonization, he set it aside for 5 years before he took another look at it and absorbed the LSD into his fingertips. He started feeling the effects as he rode his bike home that day. Essentially being the first person to trip balls on Acid.
Roast_Chikkin , ROMAN ODINTSOV / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
99points
POST
Charlie grace Charlie grace Community Member Follow
*discovered by accident
Vote comment up
51points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#4
Penicillin gotta be one of them. Guy had his to now be "the cure" left open while he went on a vacation and once he came back, he noticed that the mold was suppressing the growth of bacteria. We probs wouldn't be alive if he didn't go on that vacation and leave the dish open.
Intelligent_Pay_6958 , Karolina Grabowska / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
90points
POST
Chewie Baron Chewie Baron Community Member Follow
Alexander Fleming was the scientist. One of his students, George Albert Paine, was the first to use penicillin to treat an eye infection.
Vote comment up
65points
Vote comment down
reply
View more commentsArrow down menu
#5
Bird migration. Was discovered when a large bird was found in the north with a projectile from the south stuck in it (neck i think). Before this, it was thought the birds hibernated at the bottom of water bodies or flew to the moon or other dumb s**t.
MemeDream13 , john cox / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
86points
POST
Zedrapazia Zedrapazia Community Member
I have some extra information about that: The bird that was found was a stork with an arrow from an African tribe in its neck that somehow survived, came back and was found when it got too tired to fly from the injury. The most prevalent theory before this was found out is that birds would hibernate the way bears and rabbits do.
Vote comment up
81points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTIsem*nT
#6
Considering that Chauvet Cave was only discovered in 1994 but the paintings inside of it date back about 32 000 years, it's easy to believe that such remarkable evidence of early human history could have remain buried for a lot longer, or until the entrance collapsed ever further and it was lost forever.
derberter , Claude Valette Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
67points
POST
tifm tifm Community Member Follow
Imagine that 32000 years ago people drawing that were considered hooligans..
Vote comment up
25points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#7
The Hal Saflieni Hypogeum in Malta is a 5000 year old Neolithic temple which has three levels of architecture carved underground in the limestone. It’s a world heritage archeological site, and an amazing place to visit. It had been buried for maybe a couple of thousand years, and was discovered by accident in the early 1900s by someone digging out foundations for a house. They finished building the house before getting around to notifying authorities what they had found.
winoforever_slurp_ , Richard Ellis Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
66points
POST
Edward Finger Hands Edward Finger Hands Community Member Follow
I’ve been there!
Vote comment up
12points
Vote comment down
reply
View more commentsArrow down menu
#8
Glass is a very difficult material to make, and it’s thought that the ancients only discovered it once (somewhere in the Middle East), and it spread to other places from there (unlike writing and agriculture which seem to have developed independently in several places). The difficulty in glass is down to the temperatures required and finding an appropriate source of alkali that isn’t in a salt form. It’s some kind of astonishing coincidence that anyone put such random rare minerals together in an appropriate crucible and fired it to very high temperatures. Glasses do exist in nature (lightning strikes on sand - a red herring since anyone trying to heat up sand to a similar temperature would have met with failure up until a hundred years ago or so; and obsidian for example), so some material scientist would have figured them out at some point in the Industrial Revolution or so. But another twist we have in our timeline is glass blowing. This was invented by the Romans about a thousand years after glass production began. It’s a very unintuitive and creative way to shape glass, and requires an artistic genius to invent. Had glass only become an industrial material a hundred to so years ago, it’s almost certain that the blowing techniques that give us art and things like lightbulbs would be elusive still. The final stepping stone is highly specialized glass such as the [dichronic](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dichroic_glass) properties of the [Lycurgus cup](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycurgus_Cup), which is so rare as to be unique. The color of this glass depends on whether light is reflected off its surface or shining through it, appearing either green or red respectively. Created in 400 AD, recreations of this effect are exceptionally rare today and have never been mass produced. The effect is caused by insoluble gold and silver trace impurities in the glass ripening into nanoparticles of precise size and composition by heat treatment of the glass. Almost nothing in the world has these properties. Researchers are able to make one-off batches of this kind of glass, and even embed similar particles in [3D printed plastic](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6404512/), but carving a cup in glass is not yet automated and represents about two years of a skilled artisan’s time. In effect, manufacturing a glass of this color-effect and this carving is an invention that hasn’t quite occurred yet..
saluksic , cottonbro studio / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
66points
POST
EP EP Community Member Follow
I have sooo many questions about glass but how bout one? Why did heating sand up to lightning strike temps not produce glass? And then why in the last 100 years or so, did they get it to produce glass - what changed?
Vote comment up
15points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTIsem*nT
ADVERTIsem*nT
#9
Here's one that most people won't know : an audio effect called Gated Reverb. It was an accidental discovery made by Phil Collins and Hugh Padgam while they were working on Peter Gabriel's third self titled album in 1980. The effect thickens up the sound of the drums considerably by applying, in order, a reverb, a gate and a compressor. It was the result of the studio having a natural reverb, and the intercom between the studio and control room having a gate and compressor on it to make it more usable. While the effect was used on Gabriel's album, it became truly known a year later, when Collins released his first solo album, *Face Value,* which opens with *In The Air Tonight.* The effect is what makes the crescendo of that song so stunning, in contrast to the comparatively dull sound of a Roland CR-78 that was the sole percussion in the track up to that point..
Phreakiture , Pixabay / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
63points
POST
Nadine Debard Nadine Debard Community Member Follow
When I read reverb and Peter Gabriel I immediately had the sound of the drum in "In The Air Tonight"
Vote comment up
5points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#10
It's unlikely it would have remained undiscovered forever, but X-rays for medical imaging! The first x-ray image was an accidental exposure of a photographic plate the scientist's wife was holding - they didn't realise the rays would interact with it like visible light, and when they developed it her bones and wedding ring were visible. (This may have been the first clue they needed some safety precautions, too, but honestly all the early research into ionising radiation is terrifying. They didn't know what they were dealing with. The Curie's lab/offices are still tightly controlled due to all the radium and polonium contamination, for example.).
quiidge , cottonbro studio / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
63points
POST
Virginie Michaud Virginie Michaud Community Member Follow
Why even bother writing a post about a discovery if you're too lazy to credit the person who made it?Roentgen discovered X-rays, Alexander Flemming discovered penicillin.
Vote comment up
52points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTIsem*nT
#11
During World War II, a chemical engineer named James Wright was working for the U.S. War Production Board. Wright was attempting to create an inexpensive substitute for synthetic rubber at the General Electric Lab. In 1943, while working on an experiment, he accidentally dropped boric acid into silicone oil, and the result was a stretchy substance that was bouncier than rubber. Peter Hodgson, a businessman, saw the putty and instantly knew it could be a hit. He re-named the creation “Silly Putty” and marketed it as a toy in 1950.
Griitt , plastelina.sk Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
59points
POST
PattyK PattyK Community Member Follow
I thought he initially marketed it as a cleaner for wallpaper?
Vote comment up
21points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#12
Pyrex. Chemists and engineers at Corning Glass Works had developed the material, a strong and heat-resistant glass, for use in railroad lanterns and battery jars. Looking for additional uses for the material, one Corning R&D employee brought a sawed-off battery jar home. Presumably after cleaning it his wife used it to bake a cake, and noticed and shared that the cake baked much more evenly and quickly than traditional metal or ceramic pans, with the added bonus of being able to check on the progress of the bake through the clear glass, and here we are.
Nodadbodhere , Унайзат Юшаева / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
56points
POST
Bouche and Audi and Shyla, Oh My! Bouche and Audi and Shyla, Oh My! Community Member Follow
That's a funny looking cake in the picture.
Vote comment up
50points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#13
Rubber vulcanization. Charles Goodyear has searched for years how to make a use of rubber but the actual discovery of the vulcanization came out of luck after spilling a mixture on a hot stove.
Winter-Appearance-14 , Gerd Altmann / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
47points
POST
Hphizzle Hphizzle Community Member Follow
Live long, and prosper.
Vote comment up
42points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTIsem*nT
#14
The one I heard in chemistry class was that this chemist put some chemicals in a flask and placed a mechanical stirrer in it to stir overnight. The next morning the stirrer had stopped stirring and he found the chemicals in the flask was solid and thus ultrahard polycarbonate polymer was created. OK, since my post is rather popular I will also add that the guy who found that the stirrer was stuck in the solid polycarbonate polymer in the morning broke the glass off the flask off then went around the lab holding the stirrer handle with the polycarbonate polymer mass on it and banged on the tables around the lab saying look what I discovered.
Flashy_Attitude_1703 , Mike Jones / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
45points
POST
Hphizzle Hphizzle Community Member Follow
*Stewart from Mad TV voice* “Look what I can do!”
Vote comment up
27points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#15
Oh I study math history, I can share some fun ones! Niels Abel is famous for a few things in mathematics, but the easiest one to explain is that he proved there does not exist a general formula to find the solutions to a polynomials where the highest exponent is 5 (i.e. there's no general formula to find all the solutions to something like x^(5) + x + 1 = 0). There's the quadratic formula for when your highest exponent is 2, there's another formula for when your highest exponent is 3, and another for 4, but Abel proved it's *impossible* to find one when the highest exponent is 5 or higher. It basically depends on the idea that some algebraic numbers cannot be simply represented with +, -, *, /, or exponents. Now Abel proved this when he was 21, but Abel grew up in poverty and had no way of actually sharing this solution with others. In fact, the only reason he was able to attend college was because 3 professors offered to cover the cost because they recognized his talent. He could only afford to print 6 pages of his proof, so he had to heavily abbreviate everything, cut large chunks of his proof, *and* wrote it all in shaky French (since Norwegian isn't a common language and he wanted to share it with other mathematicians in Europe). He ends up mailing a few copies of this proof to a few mathematicians, but all of them dismiss it because it'd be an outlandish claim and nobody wanted to parse this difficult-to-read proof. In fact, Abel's letter was found unopened on Gauss's desk after Gauss died. So despite proving this major result, nobody knew about it except for Abel and the small group of mathematicians around him in Norway. The professors at his university petitioned the government to help fund his travel around Europe to learn more math and share his work and surprisingly, the government decided to fund him. While in France, he stumbled across this guy named Crelle. Abel struck up a conversation with Crelle about math and they both started talking about unsolved problems. Crelle mentioned this problem about polynomials and Abel excited mentions that he solved that problem and showed him his proof. Crelle obviously couldn't make sense of Abel's proof, but he was so captivated by his conversation with Abel, he offered to print Abel's *full* proof. This print would later turn out to be the first publication by *Crelle's Journal*, one of the most influential journals in mathematics in all of European history. With this, people began to finally learn about Abel's proof and he began to gain some notoriety. Unfortunately, this would not end well for Abel. Abel submits another major result (Abel's theorem) to this major publication in Paris, where a committee is formed to review the submission. Unfortunately, one of the reviewers, Cauchy, just straight up loses the paper. Abel, running out of funding for his travels, is forced to return home with no success on this publication. He also loses out on a major job opportunity that could've taken him out of poverty, all because he was deemed too young and his childhood mentor and friend, Holmboe, gets the job instead. He ends up dying of TB just a few years later at the age of 26. Afterwards, another mathematician, Jacobi, is reading some of Abel's work and notices how great his work is. When he learns Cauchy lost Abel's paper, he pressures Cauchy to find this paper. Cauchy sends the paper off to be published posthumously, but it is lost at the printing press. It wouldn't be found for over 100 years later, in a whole other country somehow. Thankfully though, Holmboe published Abel's work separated to help share all of Abel's results and not let others forget him. Abel's life is full of misfortune, but also great friends trying their hardest to share their friend's greatness. While Abel doesn't end up succeeding during his life, I can't help but enjoy seeing how much all of his friends cared about him, and his own ability to make friends randomly with so many people. Abel today is commonly mentioned in any undergrad group theory course because of how influential his work is on modern algebra. Without the help of people like Crelle, Holmboe, and Jacobi, we wouldn't be recognizing this work today.
dancingbanana123 , Niels Henrik Abel Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
40points
POST
Karen Krause Karen Krause Community Member Follow
I read it all. It wasn't a hard read and I like that the author was excited about his subject.
Vote comment up
34points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#16
There's typically a lot of luck in artificial-sweetener discovery. Aspartame was part of anti-ulcer research, until someone licked his finger and found it was sweet. And sucralose was found to be sweet when a foreign student misread the instruction to "test" it.
RemoteWasabi4 , Towfiqu barbhuiya / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
34points
POST
Zedrapazia Zedrapazia Community Member
I wonder how many other chemical products were accidentally eaten because someone didn't understand what testing is
Vote comment up
26points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#17
The current use for Viagra. It was originally meant for high blood pressure, then the men in the study noted a side effect. Seconc-Creative:
IIRC, while effective at lowering blood pressure, it was in a weird place where it was better than a placebo, but worse than actual blood pressure medication. However, its still sometimes prescribed to help control blood pressure.
October1966 , Castorly Stock / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
31points
POST
PattyK PattyK Community Member Follow
That is not Viagra in the photo.
Vote comment up
35points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#18
Color changing glass. Accidentally discovered in the 90’s by a bowl maker and was given free to the world. Dude could’ve been immensely wealthy being the only person who knew how to make a glass bowl change colors.
trashcount420 , Elizabeth Makes Photos / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
31points
POST
Marie Dahme Marie Dahme Community Member Follow
Wait, I thought the ancient Roman's had discovered a unique process for making glass ? Was it color changing glass ?
Vote comment up
14points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#19
I’m not sure if this counts, but Tetsuhiro Shikiyama (founder of Nippura, the company that makes thick acrylic glass for aquariums) invented the tech that glues/fuses multiple layers of clear acrylic when he dropped a udon noodle he was eating on some acrylic and had a hard time picking it up because it stuck.
P1zzaman , Markus Winkler / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
26points
POST
Kathleen McGann Kathleen McGann Community Member Follow
Not new. Just inspiration. The combo of water and flour is called paste. It's been used for millennia as glue and as noodles (pasta means "paste" in Italian)
Vote comment up
15points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#20
Czochralski process, the baseline of modern electronics as nearly all of the electronics nowadays are made on silicon grown with this process.
Guy wanted to dip his pen in ink, he dipped it in a crucible with molten tin instead.
c6h6_benzene , cottonbro studio / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
26points
POST
Zedrapazia Zedrapazia Community Member
Who has a cubicle of molten tin right on his desk next to the ink??
Vote comment up
49points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#21
The Precambrian Ediacara fossils in Australia. They were discovered in 1946 by mining engineer Reginald Sprigg who habitually looked for fossils wherever he was. Although there had been mining in South Australia's Ediacaran Hills since the 1880s nobody had looked for fossils there before because: 1) much of the rock was sandstone, not the best mineral for preserving invertebrates; 2) the formation was Precambrian, which was considered earlier than Earth's first multicellular life.
Passing4human , Verisimilus Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
24points
POST
Apatheist Account2 Apatheist Account2 Community Member Follow
So, fossils discovered by someone who looks for fossils? Doesn't belong here.
Vote comment up
12points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#22
A brown dwarf called "The Accident". A guy, Dan Caselden, in the citizen science group I'm I'm found it on accident while looking at another object that looked promising. It didn't stand out in the larger context of the sample but was clearly a good candidate when looking at the other object more closely. To add on to the uniqueness of the discovery, it's the fastest moving near earth brown dwarf found and possibly one of the oldest. It's a major outlier for Y-class Dwarfs.
AugieKS , NASA/Jonathan Holden Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
24points
POST
Marie Dahme Marie Dahme Community Member Follow
Check out Professor Dave o. YOUTUBE. he has lots of short informative videos on astronomy and cosmology and the classification of stars
Vote comment up
8points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#23
Maybe not undiscovered till today but probably good time later. Dry cleaning. The way i got told there was an french chemist who did regularly experiments in the kitchen and got into trouble regularly with his wife. One day he did his thing and spilled some stuff and used one of the towel to clean up to prevent more discussions. The wife then discovered the towel was much cleaner than usual and so dry cleaning.
Sinbos , Leticia Ribeiro / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
21points
POST
EP EP Community Member Follow
I don’t even know what dry cleaning is. I know I drop the clothes and pick them up. I have no understanding of what the clothes go through there.
Vote comment up
30points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
See Also on Bored Panda
19 Haunting Pictures That Showcase How The Most Beautiful Places Can Change After Being Abandoned
Mom Demands Her Whole Family Be Upgraded To First Class, Forcing 13-Year-Old To Give Up His Seat, But Gets Deplaned Instead
#24
Parakaryon Myojinensis. It's not necessarily a very important discovery to most people, but it's an extremely unusual microbe that isn't quite a eukaryote or prokaryote. Biologists think that it could represent some sort of "stepping stone" between the two, or even an example of abiogenesis happening multiple times throughout the history of the earth. We've only found one of these, though, so we don't know much about it.
abcde12345i , turek / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
20points
POST
The Original Bruno The Original Bruno Community Member Follow
To simplify: Cells and organelles both have a membrane which controls their chemical environment, allowing for all the chemical reactions which make life work. Procaryotes are simple organisms, single cells without organelles. The thought is that at one point, a procaryote began living within another procaryote. The organisms mutliplied, and had descendents wherein a stable number of procaryotes lived within other procaryotes. Eventually they evolved to optimize the conditions for this "symbiotic" relationships, with the inner cells evolving to become mitochondria, plastics [Oops. Meant to type "plastids"], nuclei, etc. These new, more complex organisms are called "eucaryotes," and they all have so much in common that it's believed they all descended from the same symbiotic organisms. But pM meets the definition of a eucaryote, but doesn't have all those other traits in common, so the thought is that evolution of one organism living symbiotically within a cell of another organism happened more that just the one time.
Vote comment up
20points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#25
Gunpowder? One day some Chinese alchemist just wanted to brew a concoction and he end up paving the way for the death of billions.
EXusiai99 , Lord Mountbatten Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
17points
POST
Sofia Sofia Community Member Follow
afaik they used for fireworks not war purpose
Vote comment up
23points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#26
The microwave oven.
metalmelts , Zen Chung / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
14points
POST
TennesseeHomesteadUSA TennesseeHomesteadUSA Community Member Follow
Not a microwave oven in the picture. Needs banana for scale.
Vote comment up
39points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#27
Inkjet printers. discovered by accident, when a Canon engineer set a hot iron next to his pen, only to find moments later that his pen has begun to leak ink.
Ochib , George Milton / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
10points
POST
EP EP Community Member Follow
I guess I don’t know how inkjet printers work bc I’m not understanding how leaving a hot iron next to a pen (and making it leak ink) gave the idea for inkjet printer? Wouldn’t everyone already know that ink is liquid? Or that pens would melt near heat and leak.I must not understand a large component here bc I’m missing the reveal. Help!
Vote comment up
26points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#28
Champagne. At least according to Stanley Goodspeed in The Rock - "monks thought they were making white wine. Somehow the bottle carbonated. Voila**,champagne".
ZubLor , cottonbro studio / pexels (not the actual photo) Report
Vote arrow up
Vote arrow down
9points
POST
Makabert Makabert Community Member Follow
Well thats what you get for thinking a hollywood movie will teach you history…“ As far back as the 1st century, Romans were cultivating vines and making wine in what was then northern Gaul and now the Champagne region.”. “ Dom Pérignon started with the production of wines in the Champagne region in 1668. He is the inventor of the second fermentation in the bottle what makes him for sure the founder of the Champagne as we know it.
Vote comment up
25points
Vote comment down
reply
View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
Note: this post originally had 29 images. It’s been shortened to the top 28 images based on user votes.
Anyone can write on Bored Panda. Start writing!
Follow Bored Panda on Google News!
Modal close
Add Your Answer!
Not your original work? Add source
Publish
//=__('About the author', 'boredpanda')?>
Miglė Miliūtė
Miglė Miliūtė
Writer, BoredPanda staff
A writer here at Bored Panda, I am a lover of good music, good food, and good company, which makes food-related topics and feel-good stories my favorite ones to cover. Passionate about traveling and concerts, I constantly seek occasions to visit places yet personally unexplored. I also enjoy spending free time outdoors, trying out different sports—even if I don’t look too graceful at it—or socializing over a cup of coffee.
Read more »
//=__('About the author', 'boredpanda')?>
Gabija Saveiskyte
Gabija Saveiskyte
Author, BoredPanda staff
Hi there! I am a Visual Editor at Bored Panda. My job is to ensure that all the articles are aesthetically pleasing. I get to work with a variety of topics ranging from all the relationship drama to lots and lots of memes and, my personal favorites, funny cute cats. When I am not perfecting the images, you can find me reading with a cup of matcha latte and a cat in my lap, taking photos (of my cat), getting lost in the forest, or simply cuddling with my cat... Did I mention that I love cats?
Read more »
Show All Contributors
You May Like
Viktorija Ošikaitė
Ilona Baliūnaitė
Mindaugas Balčiauskas
Popular on Bored Panda
Write comments
POST
Kathy O'Sherry Kathy O'Sherry Community Member Follow
My favorites were the ones where something was discovered by accident.
Vote comment up
8points
Vote comment down
reply
Itsme Itsme Community Member Follow
This article was discovered by accident. I think it's great! It'd be wonderful to use for a writing class to teach students common mistakes and how not to write.
Vote comment up
4points
Vote comment down
reply
Chewie Baron Chewie Baron Community Member Follow
Linoleum was discovered by accident after a Scottish engineer left a tin of paint open overnight by accident.
Vote comment up
3points
Vote comment down
reply
Andrew Burke Andrew Burke Community Member Follow
A tin of linseed oil I would have thought.
Vote comment up
1point
Vote comment down
reply
Load More Replies...
Load More Comments
POST
Kathy O'Sherry Kathy O'Sherry Community Member Follow
My favorites were the ones where something was discovered by accident.
Vote comment up
8points
Vote comment down
reply
Itsme Itsme Community Member Follow
This article was discovered by accident. I think it's great! It'd be wonderful to use for a writing class to teach students common mistakes and how not to write.
Vote comment up
4points
Vote comment down
reply
Chewie Baron Chewie Baron Community Member Follow
Linoleum was discovered by accident after a Scottish engineer left a tin of paint open overnight by accident.
Vote comment up
3points
Vote comment down
reply
Andrew Burke Andrew Burke Community Member Follow
A tin of linseed oil I would have thought.
Vote comment up
1point
Vote comment down
reply
Load More Replies...
Load More Comments
Popular on Bored Panda
Trending on Bored Panda
Newsletter
Stay Tuned to Your Favorite Categories
More categories Subscription arrow right
Thank you! You've successfully subscribed to newsletters!
By entering your email and clicking Subscribe, you're agreeing to let us send you customized marketing messages about us and our advertising partners. You are also agreeing to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
Also on Bored Panda