var arrayFacts = [

"<b>Mole Monarch:</b><br><br>Like social insects, naked mole rats live in colonies. Only the queen mates and produces young. ",

"<b>A Star Among Moles:</b><br><br>The Star-nosed Mole is among the most bizarre looking animals in the world.<br><br>It has tentacle-like projections coming out of its nose, which enable the mammal to navigate and find food. When the Star-nosed Mole is on the prowl for earthworms, its tentacles move constantly.<br><br>When it eats, its nose projections clump together away from its mouth.",

"<b>Naked, but not a Mole or a Rat:</b><br><br>Naked Mole-rats burrow underground like moles and have teeth like rats.<br><br>Still, the creatures are more closely related to porcupines and guinea pigs than either rats or moles.",

"<b>Should I Stay or Should I Go?</b><br><br>Naked Mole-rats can run equally fast going forward and backward.",

"<b>Mole Table Manners:</b><br><br>The star-nosed mole can detect small prey and gobble them up so fast that humans cannot see them eat. ",

"<b>You've Really Got A Hold On Me:</b><br><br>The Star-nosed Mole has strange, tweezer-like incisors that enable them to grip small prey with ease.",

"<b>The Nose Knows:</b><br><br>Many kinds of mole are functionally blind and navigate by touching their surroundings with their sensitive snouts. ",

"<b>Mountain of a Mole-hill:</b><br><br>Townsend moles build nesting chambers that are often high above their burrow system.<br><br>From above the ground, these chambers look like huge mounds on the ground, and can be 76 cm in diameter and 36 cm high. ",

"<b>Built for Speed:</b><br><br>Eastern moles can dig up to 4.5 meters in one hour! Their powerful forefeet are perfectly adapted to their burrowing lifestyles.<br><br>One Eastern mole is known to have dug 31 meters of tunnel in one day!",

"<b>Dig Deep:</b><br><br>Eastern moles are designed for digging. Their large forefeet resemble paddles, and their broad shoulders and forelimbs provide a great deal of surface to which muscles can attach.<br><br>When they burrow, they dive into the ground, shoving their feet into the soil and then rotating their forelimbs to move loose dirt behind them.",

"<b>Hairy Hosts:</b><br><br>Hairy-tailed moles are hosts to many harmful parasites, including roundworms, flees, mites, lice, and beetles."];
