- ...that within a year after the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, one venue was converted into a baseball stadium while two others were imploded?
- ...that the highest temperature ever recorded in the U.S. state of Georgia is 112 °F (44 °C), while the lowest ever recorded is -17 °F (-27 °C)?
- ...that among the effects of Hurricane Dennis in Georgia was the death of a Decatur man from a tree that fell on his bedroom?
- ...that the Old Harbor Light in Savannah, Georgia, also known as the Savannah Harbor Rear Range Light, resembles a giant streetlight?
Instructions
editThese "Did you know..." subpages are randomly displayed using {{Random subpage}}.
- The layout design for these subpages is at Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/Layout.
- DYKs at this list must have successfully already appeared at Template:Did you know.
- Add a new DYK to the next available subpage.
- Update the "Random subpage" start and end values above to include the new DYK and evenly distribute the number of items across all three display templates.
DYK list
editDYK: 1-10
editPortal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/1
- ...that, in 1973, a Learjet 24 crashed shortly after take-off from DeKalb–Peachtree Airport after striking birds which likely came from a landfill site adjacent to the runway?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/2
- ...that within a year after the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, one venue was converted into a baseball stadium while two others were imploded?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/3
- ...that prehistoric people used the same 89 °F (32 °C) warm springs that Franklin Delano Roosevelt would use in the 20th century?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/4
- ...that, by the end of the 20th century, the Peachtree Presbyterian megachurch had the largest Presbyterian congregation of any church in the United States?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/5
- ...that the highest temperature ever recorded in the U.S. state of Georgia is 112 °F (44 °C), while the lowest ever recorded is -17 °F (-27 °C)?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/6
- ...that 29 employees were killed in the Thiokol-Woodbine Explosion when a fire spread down an assembly line and detonated 56,322 magnesium tripflares that had been manufactured for the U.S. Army?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/7
- ...that the U.S. military's Tybee hydrogen bomb, missing off the coast of the state of Georgia since 1958, may recently have been discovered?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/8
- ...that the Great Atlanta fire of 1917 destroyed 300 acres and nearly 2,000 buildings and was put out with help from fire engines as far away as Knoxville, Tennessee?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/9
- ...that among the effects of Hurricane Dennis in Georgia was the death of a Decatur man from a tree that fell on his bedroom?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/10
- ...that over 400 species of birds have been recorded in the American state of Georgia?
DYK: 11-15
editPortal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/11
- ...that Hulk Hogan's Pastamania was a restaurant located in the Mall of America and created by the WWE's Hulk Hogan, and that it failed spectacularly?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/12
- ...that retired American baseball player Hank Aaron holds ten Atlanta Braves team records?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/13
- ...that the Franklin House, built on a lot once owned by the University of Georgia, has held a hotel and a hardware company, and now leases office space to the university?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/14
- ...that the Old Harbor Light in Savannah, Georgia, also known as the Savannah Harbor Rear Range Light, resembles a giant streetlight?
Portal:Georgia (U.S. state)/Did you know/15
- ...that the Atlanta Neighborhood Union, an all-women African-American association founded in 1908, was a model for other improvement associations?
Nominations
edit- Any Georgia (U.S. state)-related WP:DYKs that have previously appeared at Template:DYK may be added to the next available subpage, above.
- All hooks must first have appeared on the Main Page in the Did you know section.
- Note: -- Each hook and selected fact requires a link cited at its respective subpage to the time it appeared on the Main Page in Template:Did you know, or the associated WP:DYK archive at Wikipedia:Recent additions.