Our “Mexico: Did You Know” series
offers lots of not-so-well-known but interesting facts about Mexico’s contributions to the world.
Here is the list (most recent at the top):
- First scientific account of Lake Chapala was in 1839.
- Mexico’s vultures have very different eating habits.
- Los Mochis and Topolobampo are both examples of “new towns”.
- The world’s oldest railway station building is at Cuautla in central Mexico.
- Despite its name, the turkey originated in Mexico”
- One of Mexico’s earliest cartographers was the first European to explore the Georgia Strait between Vancouver and Vancouver Island in British Columbia “
- Many common garden flowers were developed from samples collected in Mexico by a German botanist financed by Britain’s Horticultural Society”
- Mexico has more World Heritage sites than any other country in the Americas”
- “There’s gold in them there hills, and diamonds in that there tequila”
- Mexico was once the world’s major source of pearls
- An early story by Jules Verne, the science fiction and travel author, was set in Mexico
- The introduction of sheep to Mexico had serious environmental consequences
- The deepest water-filled sinkhole in the world is in Tamaulipas
- Sinaloa has the most beautiful women in Mexico
- Steamboats once regularly plied the waters of Lake Chapala
- Oaxaca is the most culturally diverse state in Mexico
- November 7, 2007, marks the centenary of the death of Jesús García, the “Hero of Nacozari”
- An unusual Mayan pyramid in Tabasco suggests possible links to the Romans
- Mexico once tried hard to prevent Americans from migrating to Texas
- Mexico has more than thirty UNESCO-designated Biosphere Reserves
- The world’s first aerial bombing of a warship was during the Battle of Topolobampo
- What the Spanish Conquistadors thought was gold was often only an alloy called tumbaga
- A miraculous birth and a miraculous re-birth featured in the life and work of the first Archbishop of Oaxaca
- Organic farming has helped some indigenous peoples in Mexico to reinvent themselves
- A young couple who became famous artists were pioneers in the San Miguel de Allende foreign community
- Blacks outnumbered Spaniards in Mexico until after 1810
- A charwoman-actress once captivated Mexican high society in her alter ego as Don Carlos Balmori
- Mexico’s equivalent of the Domesday book was compiled in the sixteenth century
- A popular Mexican children’s chorus features cockroaches and pot smoking
- Father Alonso Ponce and Friar Antonio de Ciudad Real were probably Mexico’s first ever tourists
- Mexico has more World Heritage sites than any other country in the Americas
- Some tequila is priced at 225,000 dollars a bottle
- Most “bark paper” comes from wild fig trees
- Five places in Mexico are on the list of the world’s 100 most endangered heritage sites
- Cinco de Mayo (May 5th) is celebrated much more widely in the U.S. than in Mexico
- Different traffic whistles mean very different things
- One of the oldest printing presses still in operation anywhere in the world is in Tacámbaro, Michoacán
- One of the most interesting nineteenth century books about Mexico was written by a Frenchman
- The American White Pelican is Mexico’s largest bird, while its relative the Brown Pelican is one of the most fun to watch
- Tequila dates from the sixteenth century
- Comprehensive guide books to Mexico have existed for more than 120 years
- The oldest winery in the Americas is in Parras de la Fuente
- Scientists first explored El Pico de Orizaba, Mexico’s highest peak, as long ago as 1838
- A young Belgian botanist established a business exporting Mexican cacti to Europe back in the 1840s
- This year is the centenary of the birth of Mexican artist Juan O’Gorman
- Thousands of dinosaur bones have been found in northern Mexico
- Lake Chapala is under attack (again) from the beautiful and exotic water hyacinth
- Voladores and Vanilla vie for attention at the Vanilla Festival in Veracruz
- The song “Bésame mucho” (Kiss me a lot) was written by a young Mexican woman who had never been kissed
- Mexico’s national flower is the humble dahlia
- January’s weather serves as a forecast for the year
- Tlacuaches (opossums) are short-lived but smarter than most people imagine
- Mexico was a very different place fifty years ago
- Some national symbols are not what they appear to be
- Mayan architects may be responsible for the world’s oldest sound recording
- Mexican kapok trees once helped the U.S. war effort
- Dancers performing the Quetzal Dance wear headdresses up to five feet across
- An indigenous community in Michoacán won the 2004 United Nations Development Program Equator Prize
- An enchanted lake in Veracruz rises every dry season, but falls again during the rainy season
- Pre-Columbian astronomers agreed how to “fix” the calendar at a congress held in Xochicalco in 765 A.D.
- The world’s smallest volcano is in Puebla
- Thousands of Mexican secondary school students receive all their classes by TV
- Archaeologists have found fifteen-hundred-year-old kitchens
- The world’s first patent for a color TV was granted to a Mexican inventor
- Mexico has more World Heritage sites than any other country in the Americas
- Mexico has many “Est”raordinary places
- The famous poem, “The Bells of San Blas”, was written by someone who had never ever visited the town
- There is a village in Mexico with the unlikely name of Honey
- Agaves can be thought of as Mexico’s “7-Elevens”
- The world’s largest natural crystals (of selenite, said to enhance sex drive) have been discovered in caverns in Chihuahua
- An entire island has been constructed, not by Bob the Builder, but by Richie the Recycler
- The birth control pill came from Mexican yams
- Studies of the Mexican wave may suggest how to control unruly mobs
- A small church in Michoacán has been called the “Sistine Chapel of the Americas”
- Mexico has more than one geographic center
- El Arbol de Tule, the biggest tree in the world (Santa Maria del Tule, Oaxaca, Mexico)
- Many museums have the map of one of Mexico’s most famous battlefields upside down
- Rubber balls wouldn’t bounce very high if it wasn’t for some Mexican ingenuity
- Baseball is not the oldest ballgame in the Americas
- The oldest indigenous American domesticated dog breed is native to Mexico
- A Mexican who tried to revolutionize the world of classical music was once nominated for the Nobel Prize in Physics
- As many as 62 indigenous languages are still spoken in Mexico
- Several famous Mexican artists had serious physical disabilities
- Mexico is home to more than 50 species of hummingbirds
- The first Whitbread Round-The-World Yacht Race was won by a Mexican
- Three thousand people died during a cholera epidemic in Guadalajara in 1833
- Even “Microwaves” (with a view!) are signposted along Mexican Highways
- More Mexican Guinness Records . . .
- Puerto Vallarta is ‘soon’ to become an Island
- Mexico features several times in the Guinness Book of World Records
- There wouldn’t be many Irish people in the United States if it wasn’t for a Mexican fungus
- Cats have 7 lives, Tuesday the 13th, and April Fool’s Day on December 28th
- At one time Alaska was part of Mexico
- Mexican Jumping Beans – “Frijoles Saltarines”
- Tobacco – Xigar
- Arteplumaria
- Pyramid Power
- Amalla – A Sacred Game
- Henequén – Sisal
- Nochebuena
- Peanuts
- Pineapples & Papayas
- Vanilla
- Chocolate.
- Chewing Gum and Mr Wrigley.
Published or Updated on: October 1, 2019