 DK Audio presents 13 and a half incredible things you need to know about everything, read by Alex Wingfield. What will you hear? Find out things you never knew you needed to know in this catalogue of curiosities. From bees to blood. Money to mummies. Each entry offers up 13 and a half incredible facts. Keep listening to hear where you'll go next. How did Earth? Earth came into being about 4.6 billion years ago. This huge spinning ball of rock and metal is not as rigid as it seems. The surface of our planet is constantly changing as continents collide, mountains rise up and oceans widen. 1. The ground may feel firm beneath your feet, but Earth's rigid outer layer, the crust, is only a few kilometres thick in places. This rocky surface makes up just 1% of Earth's total volume. 2. The crust is broken into pieces called tectonic plates, which fit together like a giant jigsaw puzzle. However, unlike jigsaw pieces, these plates are constantly on the move, shifting around and crashing into each other. 3. Earth's largest layer, the mantle, is about 2,900 kilometres, 1,800 miles thick. The tectonic plates float on the mantle, which is made of solid rock but flows very slowly due to the extreme temperature and pressure. 4. Wrapped around the centre of our planet, the outer core is a liquid layer of iron and nickel. These swirling metals create Earth's magnetic field. 5. Tectonic plates all move at different rates, and the Nazca plate, the plate to the west of South America, is the fastest. Every year it moves approximately 8 centimetres, 3 inches, about half as fast as hair grows. 6. Earthquakes and volcanoes often happen along plate boundaries. One such hotspot is the East African Rift, where the African plate is slowly splitting in two. Eventually, a new ocean will fill the ever-widening gap. 7. Earth's continents were once joined together in a single landmass known as Pangaea. Scientists predict that in about 250 million years, the continents will merge once more. 8. Every other planet in our solar system is named after a Greek or Roman god, except ours. The word Earth comes from the Anglo-Saxon word eida, which means ground or soil, and is thought to be 1,000 years old. 9. The inner core is made mostly of iron. At 5,000 to 6,000 degrees Celsius, 9,000 to 10,800 degrees Fahrenheit, it's about as scorching as the sun. There is so much pressure at the centre of Earth that, despite the heat, the inner core is solid. 10. If you could dig a tunnel through Earth from one side to the other, it would be 12,756 kilometres, 7,926 miles long. In reality, the deepest tunnel ever dug, the Kola Superdeep borehole in Russia, barely scratches the surface at 12 kilometres, 7.5 miles deep. 11. Mountains are formed along the boundaries of tectonic plates. The longest mountain range of all, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, is hidden deep in the ocean. It was formed by plates pulling apart, causing hot magma to erupt from the mantle and mould into stiff peaks. 12. Forget sun and sand, the world's biggest desert. Sample complete. Ready to continue?