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A honey bee tracheal mite, at 100 microns, is tiny enough to live in a bee's windpipe.
All the more impressive given that bees don't breathe through their mouths, but instead through little holes in the side of their bodies called "Spiracles."
Bee stings are rubbish to you, but suicide for the bee - they leave their stinger and part of their exoskeleton with you as a parting gift, then go off to die.
Many of our english element names have their roots in other languages, though mostly Latin:
Tin (Sn) was once Stannum (Latin)
Tungsten (W) was Wolfram (German)
Gold (Au) was "Aurum" (Latin)
Silver (Ag) was "Argentum" (Latin)
Potassium (K) was "kalium" (Latin)
Sodium (Na) was "natron" (Latin)
Iron (Fe) was "ferrum" (Latin)
Antimony (Sb) was "stibium" (Latin)
Mercury (Hg) was "hydrargyrum" (Latin for "liquid silver")
Lead (Pb) was "plumbum" (Latin), which gives rise to the phrase "Sitting plumb" or "hang a plumb" - an architect or builder would hang a lead weight on a string to see if something was on a straight vertical line.
Uranium (Element number 92) is the highest-atomic-number element that is naturally occuring. Everything after that is our own darned fault.
The lowest atomic-number element that is manmade is Technetium, number 43.