6 claim verifications about Earth Earth ×
“Diamonds are among the rarest gemstones on Earth.”
Diamonds are not among the rarest gemstones on Earth. While diamond formation requires specific geological conditions, diamonds are actually among the most common gemstones by volume — the International Gem Society calls them "likely the most common gem in nature." Numerous gemstones, including Red Beryl (1,000+ times rarer), Painite, Tanzanite, and Alexandrite, dramatically exceed diamonds in scarcity. The perception of diamond rarity was largely shaped by marketing, not geological reality.
“The Earth will experience a loss of gravity for seven seconds during the solar eclipse in August 2026.”
This claim is false. NASA has explicitly stated that a solar eclipse has "no unusual impact on Earth's gravity" and that Earth cannot "lose gravity" without losing mass. The claim originated from a viral social media conspiracy post. While eclipses produce tiny, ordinary tidal variations in local gravity (on the order of 0.0000178%), this is not a "loss of gravity" — and certainly not a seven-second global shutdown. No credible scientific evidence supports this claim.
“If all the world's bacteria were stacked on top of each other, the resulting column would stretch approximately 10 billion light-years.”
The claim that stacked bacteria would stretch "10 billion light-years" is misleading. Using the most widely cited estimate of ~5×10³⁰ bacteria at ~2 µm average length, the stack reaches roughly 1 billion light-years — a full order of magnitude less. Even generous assumptions (including archaea) yield ~6 billion light-years. The only sources citing "10 billion" are popular trivia pages, while the original 1998 Whitman estimate actually claimed "a trillion light-years." The general concept of an astronomically vast distance is valid, but the specific figure is not mathematically supported.
“There are more stars in the Milky Way galaxy than there are trees on Earth.”
This claim is false — it gets the comparison backwards. NASA and ESA estimate the Milky Way contains roughly 100–400 billion stars, while a landmark 2015 Yale/Nature study estimates approximately 3 trillion trees on Earth. Even using the highest credible star estimates, trees outnumber Milky Way stars by a factor of roughly 7 to 30. The popular belief that stars vastly outnumber trees is a common misconception.
“The Earth has a flat shape rather than a spherical shape.”
The claim is false. Multiple independent, repeatable observations (satellite/space imagery, Earth’s consistently round shadow during lunar eclipses, horizon and latitude/star-visibility effects, and circumnavigation) confirm Earth is an oblate spheroid. The cited sources unanimously refute flat-Earth arguments; no credible evidence in the record supports a flat Earth.
“Current atmospheric CO2 levels are not unprecedented when compared to levels found throughout Earth's full geological record.”
The claim is technically accurate: multiple peer-reviewed studies confirm CO2 exceeded 1,000–2,000 ppm during earlier geological periods (e.g., Mesozoic, Eocene), well above today's ~422 ppm. However, the claim omits critical context. Current CO2 is the highest in at least 14 million years, the rate of increase is roughly 100 times faster than any known natural rise, and deep-time CO2 estimates carry large uncertainties (±500 ppm). The literal statement is defensible, but its framing can create a misleading impression that today's levels are unremarkable.