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Check out these bizarre things seen under a microscope! You won't believe this top 10 list of strange and weird items researched under an electron microscope!

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13.) Seawater
Looking under a microscope, seawater could probably remind you of sand. While the bits that make up seawater look a little like sand, it doesn’t sound as nice. In fact, the little pieces of sea water you see under a microscope is diatoms, a catchall term for the various dead algae bits floating around the ocean. The bits of diatoms take different shapes, ranging from round items that could remind you of a donut to industrial waste. Furthermore, if you look closely, you might be able to see tiny creatures, such as crab larva, cyanobacteria, copepods, chaetognaths, fish eggs, and marine worms. After learning this, you probably realize there are a lot of reasons why you shouldn’t swallow seawater!

12.) Shark Skin
The skin of a shark is quite unusual when you view it under a microscope. While it looks gray and similar to any other skin of a sea creature, it is actually made up of very unique scales that people often compare to teeth. In fact, a shark's skin is covered in millions of microscopic denticles: rigid tooth-like scales that jut out from the soft skin beneath. By disrupting the flow of water over the fish's skin, it is believed that the denticles reduce drag, making for a more efficient swimmer. It also helps them to eat anything as easily as possible. It is also said that once shark skin is dried out, it can be used to file softer materials such as wood! Let me know if this is true or not because I have never heard this before.

11.) Chalk
While chalk is not as popular or as common as it used to be, it is an interesting item to see under a microscope! It probably looks different from what you would image. When you use chalk, it pretty much turns into a powder, which would make you think under a microscope it would look like sand or a mountain of powdered sugar! However it looks much different. Up close and personal, chalk actually looks like a million little soccer balls made out of little pieces of bones. These little balls are actually the shells of dead microscopic organisms like foraminifera mixed with the corpses of sea algae. Kind of darker than you expected, huh?

10.) Sand
If you have not had the chance to look at sand under a microscope, what are you waiting for? While sand might just look brown underneath your feet as you are walking on a beach, under a microscope it is a completely different story. Sand actually looks like several little tiny pieces of unique rocks and shells. In fact, one little bit of sand can show a different variety of tiny treasures, with each item having its own shape and color. You might see a mix of what looks like sea shells, crystals, and different colored rocks. Sand can be so fascinating under a microscope that a man by the name of Dr. Gary Greenberg has spent decades collecting sand from various parts of the world, studying it under a microscope, and writing a book about his findings. He states that sand composition can vary drastically depending on where it is located. Dr. Greenberg states that, through his studies, he has found out that conditions such as temperature, marine environment, and surf conditions contribute to what type of rocks are found in the sand.

9.) Alcoholic Drinks
Alcoholic beverages under a microscope could be compared to works of splattered paint! You have to kind of stop and stare to figure out what it is and also to admire the beauty of the color combinations! That is if you like modern art, otherwise you can just skip this.
Several pictures of alcoholic drinks have been studied by Florida State University's chemistry department. Bevshots founder Lester Hutt explains the pictures by stating, what you can see in the magnified pictures are the crystalized carbohydrates that have become sugars and glucose. He further explains that looking at any alcoholic drink under a microscope takes weeks as they need to dry out the droplets of these drinks before they can go under a microscope for their photoshoot. Hutt explains that they easily take about 200 pictures before the right picture is taken of the droplet!

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