var arrayFacts = [

"<b>Triple the Neurons, Triple the Fun:</b><br><br>An octopus' brain has three times the number of neurons than that of a human. ",

"<b>Escape Artist:</b><br><br>An octopus is capable of squeezing through holes the size of a dime.",

"<b>Don't Make An Ink!</b><br><br>Octopus ink is toxic, even to itself.",

"<b>Snail Smile:</b><br><br>A snail can have about 25,000 teeth.",

"<b>Protective Slime:</b><br><br>A snail's discharge protects its body so well that it could crawl along a razor's edge without risk of injury.",

"<b>Snail Bomb Shell-ter:</b><br><br>Snails can stay in their shells for three months at a time without food.",

"<b>Even Snails Blush:</b><br><br> When young abalones feed on red seaweed, their shells turn red. <br><br>Abalones are snails found on rocks near the shores of most warm seas.",

"<b>The Big Sleep:</b><br><br> Snails can sleep for 3 years without waking.",

"<b>The old story of the shipworm and the rotary shield: </b><br><br>One engineer stumbled on the idea of the rotary shield when trying to figure out how the shipworm's body worked. The shipworm is a bivalve that drills tunnels into the wood of pilings and ships. <br><br>Drilling holes that are a foot long and a quarter-inch wide, they can be damaging to ships' hulls. The shipworm attaches itself to the wood then turns itself, using its shell's serrated edges to scrape away at the wood. <br><br>This revolving motion makes the hole bigger than the shell, giving the engineer the idea for the rotary shield, which is still used in tunnels today."];

