When we meet Dr Beaudette for the first time, his arms are folded across his chest. When the camera cuts to a reverse angle, his hands are on his hips.
Before the experiment in which Hodgins and Nigel-Murray use liquid nitrogen to freeze a turkey and drop it in order to make the turkey shatter like the victim, Hodgins gives the temperature of the liquid nitrogen in 3 scales: Kelvin, Celsius, and Fahrenheit. Nigel-Murray corrects Hodgins by saying that he doesn't have to say "degrees" for Celsius because it is implied. Nigel-Murray is incorrect, you absolutely do need to say "degrees" when giving a temperature in Celsius, the temperature scale for which you do not need to say "degrees" (and for which Hodgins mistakenly does) is Kelvin.
Mullins states that the Large Hadron Collider can create a black hole that can consume Earth and many Nobel Prize laureates who agree on this. Black holes 'consume' surrounding energy and matter because they are technically extremely dense stars, with a mass (and thus, the gravitional field) much higher than the mass of a planet. A black hole created in a laboratory would instantly evaporate, causing a minute explosion at best,
In a space as small as the vibration chamber, and with their eardrums already under heavy assault, the shock of Booth's triple gunshots would have been more than enough to rupture one or both eardrums of both Booth and Brennan, potentially causing permanent deafness.
When Hodgins wakes up in the supposed "Texas desert" there are Saguaro cacti in the background. There are no Saguaro cacti in Texas.
Brennan explains to Booth that numerous mundane substances fluoresce under Luminol, and for that reason the stains in the chamber are unlikely to be blood.
However numerous other times in the series, both before and after this episode, Brennan immediately declares various luminous stain she encounters to be blood.