var arrayFacts = [

"<b>What a Wig!</b><br><br>The chinchilla has the densest fur in the entire animal kingdom.<br><br>While humans only grow a single hair out of each follicle, chinchillas grow sixty hairs from a single follicle!<br><br>Chinchillas have more than 20,000 hairs per square cm of fur.",

"<b>Pest-free Pelt:</b><br><br>Chinchilla fur is so dense that parasites, including fleas, would suffocate if they lived on the rodents.",

"<b>Chinchilla Childhood:</b><br><br>Chinchillas have the longest gestation period of any rodent-111 days!<br><br>Because of this long pregnancy, baby chinchillas are born with open eyes, teeth, fully furred, and almost ready to eat solid vegetation.",

"<b>In Self Defence:</b><br><br>Chinchillas have beautiful fur, but they are not afraid to let it go.<br><br>Because the hairs are loosely attached, they will be shed the instant a predator grasps them.<br><br>This leaves predators like owls and foxes with a mouthful of hair, rather than a tasty treat.",

"<b>Chinchilla Tragedy:</b><br><br>Since the age of the Incas, chinchillas have been hunted for their fur. By the 20th century, the numbers of wild chinchillas were gravely low.<br><br>While many chinchillas live in captivity, they are almost extinct in the wild.<br><br>Sadly, attempts to reintroduce captive-bred chinchillas into the wild have failed because decades of selective breeding by the fur trade have rendered the creatures incapable of living in the wild.",

"<b>Fur Winter Weather:</b><br><br>Chinchillas' thick fur keeps them warm in their cold habitat in the Andes Mountains.<br><br>In the wild, the rodents bathe in powdered volcanic ash to prevent their coats from being matted down with oil.",

"<b>Coat Cult:</b><br><br>By 1900, roughly 500,000 chinchilla skins were exported each year from Chile.<br><br>When the rodents became exceedingly rare in the wild, the price of their skins went much higher. Wild chinchilla coats have sold for $100,000!",

"<b>Some Don't Like it Hot:</b><br><br>Chinchillas evolved to live in the cold Andes Mountains, and cannot tolerate heat stress.<br><br>They are extremely uncomfortable in temperatures above 80 degrees Fahrenheit, and could die if they stay in environments above 90 for any length of time."];
