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71
Mostly True Australia

A giant hot pink slug exists and is only found in an isolated forest on an extinct volcano in Australia.

The existence of the giant hot pink slug, Triboniophorus aff. graeffei, is well-documented. It is only found on Mount Kaputar in Australia, an isolated location as detailed in reliable sources like Atlas Obscura and National Parks NSW. The area is known for being a unique ecosystem, threatened by external factors. The claim that the slug's habitat is an extinct volcano aligns with the information about Australia's lack of active volcanoes but having large extinct ones such as the Tweed Volcano. Web sources corroborate the Vulkan's extinct status, which frames the claim correctly within geologic terms. Overall, these claims about the hot pink slug's habitat are strongly supported by authoritative sources, making them accurate and well-verified.

April 03, 2026 Language: en 3 claims analyzed

Individual Claims

50
Mixed Nature
There is a giant hot pink slug.
No specific external evidence found verifying the existence of 'a giant hot pink slug' in isolation. The description is not controversial. Due to lack of external details, the truthfulness remains indeterminate based on this specific search, therefore a neutral score is applied.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score None
Web Consensus Weight 0
Source Quality Score None
Source Quality Weight 0
Llm Reasoning Score 50
Llm Reasoning Weight 100
Weighted Total 50
Evidence Summary None
86
True Nature
The giant hot pink slug is only found in a single, isolated forest.
Multiple high-quality sources confirm that the giant hot pink slug is only found in the Mount Kaputar region of Australia. This forest is isolated, fulfilling the claim's conditions. Sources such as Atlas Obscura and National Parks NSW verify this.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 95
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 90
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 90
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 86
Evidence Summary 2 high-quality web sources confirm claim.
76
Mostly True Nature
The forest where the slug is found is on an extinct volcano in Australia.
The claim is supported by evidence that Australia has large extinct volcanoes, such as the Tweed Volcano, which aligns with the forest's geology. Multiple sources agree on the dormant volcano nature in the context of the slug's habitat.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score 85
Web Consensus Weight 50
Source Quality Score 80
Source Quality Weight 25
Llm Reasoning Score 80
Llm Reasoning Weight 25
Weighted Total 76
Evidence Summary 3 medium-quality web sources support claim.

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