Thursday, August 12, 2010
DELL
Dell (NASDAQ: DELL) is a global vendor of personal computers and is one of the largest companies in America, employing over 78,900 people (with approximately 33% located in US and rest in other countries) and earning revenues of $59.9 billion in FY 2010. In addition to both desktop and notebook PCs, Dell sells peripherals, software, accessories, corporate servers and storage systems, and customer support services.[1]
Traditionally, Dell had been concentrated in the domestic PC market. However by FY09 48% of the revenue was from outside the U.S.. The international market (outside the U.S.) actually saw a growth of 4% in revenue growth while there was a 3% decline in revenue for the U.S.. The decline in the U.S. revenue has been attributed to the downturn in the global economy that affected their commercial business. [2]
Beginning in 2007, Dell began forming partnerships with large retailers across the U.S., Europe and Asia. Notable among these are Wal-Mart Stores, Best Buy (BBY), Costco Wholesale (COST), Staples, Carrefour and Suning and Gome, China's largest electronics store. These partnerships represent a drastic departure from Dell's previous strategy which purposely excluded any relationships with retailers. As a result, in addition to its traditional mail order distribution system, Dell now has nearly 24,000 retail locations worldwide.[3] Throughout 2008, international sales continued growing and accounted for approximately half of Dell's revenues.[4]
As corporations upgrade their computer systems to meet the compatibility requirements of Microsoft’s Windows Vista operating system, Dell’s higher-margin commercial business stands to benefit from increased demand. Dell is also responding to somewhat unimpressive PC sales growth by expanding their offerings of non-PC electronics and increasing their presence in developing countries such as India and China.
Company Overview
Dell offers a variety of products and services. Among its offerings are a wide array of desktop and notebook computers, peripherals and software, technical support services, and corporate servers and storage systems. In addition, Dell’s subsidiary Alienware offers desktops, notebooks, and peripherals specialized for high-end video and audio editing and gaming.
Business and Financial Metrics
In the first quarter of 2010, Dell's profit increased 52% from a year earlier to $441 million, as revenue rose 21% to $14.87 billion. However, despite Dell's cost cutting this quarter, Dell's gross profit margin declined from 17.6% to 16.8%. Pickup in IT spending at corporations fueled Dell's revenue and profit increase this quarter because many companies are seeking to upgrade to Microsoft's Windows 7. Sales to big corporations have increased 25% to $4.2 billion. Likewise, Dell's small-and-medium business division's revenue was up 19% to $3.5 billion.[5] However, on June 10th, 2010, Dell lowered its first-quarter results by $100 million to build up a $100 million reserve that may be used to settle an ongoing SEC accounting probe. Dell faces negligence-based charges related to with what it disclosed about its relationship with Intel before fiscal 2008.[6]
On July 27, Dell announced it would pay $100 million to settle with the SEC. Senior executives were accused by the SEC of using fradulent accounting methods to boost earnings. The SEC alleges that, from 2002 to 2006, Dell recieved payments from Intel for using Intel chips in in Dell computers. Dell did not disclose to investors that it was recieving these psayments, which were in the form of rebates which allowed Dell to reduce its cost of goods sold. Dell attributed the rising profit margin instead to "cost cutting measures" and "declining component cost."[7]
In 2009, revenue decreased 13% year-over-year to $52.9 billion, with net income falling 42% from $2.5 billion to $1.4 billion. Revenue grew across all regions: Asia Pacific-Japan (“APJ”) grew 15%; Europe, Middle East, and Africa (“EMEA”) increased 12%; and the Americas grew 3%.[8] Revenue outside the U.S. represented approximately 47% of Fiscal 2008 net revenue, compared to approximately 44% in the prior year. Outside the U.S., Dell produced 14% year-over-year revenue growth for Fiscal 2008, though unit growth was below the overall unit growth rate of the international PC market.[9]
Business Segments
PCs (60% of revenue)
Dell produces several lines of consumer and commercial PC systems, including both desktop and notebook models. Overall, Dell holds about 14% of the worldwide PC market. Within the PC segment, desktops contributed 32% of Dell’s Fiscal 2008 revenue, and notebooks accounted for 28%.[10]
Software, Peripherals, and Accessories (16% of revenue)
Dell sells various software programs with its PC systems, such as productivity software, security programs, and games. Dell also sells a number of computer-related peripherals, including LCD monitors, printers, input and storage devices, etc. Aside from PC-related items, Dell sells various accessories and electronic devices, such as LCD televisions, digital cameras, and MP3 players. These software and peripherals accounted for 16% of Dell’s Fiscal 2008 revenue.[11]
Servers and Storage (15% of revenue)
For its corporate customers, Dell provides both servers and storage systems. Dell continues to aggressively pursue this market, bringing 9 new enterprise servers to corporate consumers in January of 2008. Dell also sells customized servers and enterprise systems designed to meet the specific needs of certain customers. Servers and storage accounted for 15% of Dell's Fiscal 2008 revenue.[12]
Technical Support and Services (9% of revenue)
Dell also sells technical support services for its products, providing customers with assistance after they purchase their systems. Typically, services such as these provide high margins relative to Dell’s other business segments. Typically, services such as these provide high margins relative to Dell's other business segments. Though services accounted for only 9% of total sales, they contributed around 35% to Dell's 2006 gross profits Services accounted for 9% of total revenue for the Fiscal year 2008.[13]
Trends and Forces
Upgrade Cycles force companies to replace their computer systems
As technology evolves, companies often upgrade or replace their computer systems to take advantage of new technologies, an occurrence known as the upgrade cycle. Technological innovations can trigger the upgrade cycle and increase demand for Dell’s products, while a lack of new developments can discourage companies from upgrading their computer systems. This cycle occurs primarily in the commercial market, where companies tend to replace all their computers at once. This can significantly impact Dell’s revenues, as 49% of Dell's revenue is to business in the Americas (not including businesses in Europe and Asia).[14]
The release of a product like Microsoft’s Windows Seven operating system could trigger an upgrade cycle in Dell’s commercial segment. As seen with Vista, compatibility issues will occur, encouraging companies to upgrade their systems to take advantage of Seven's new features. This potentially increased demand in the higher-margin commercial segments could positively impact Dell’s total sales.
Dell is expanding its global presence through deals with various retailers
Established in 1984, Dell is a relative newcomer in the computer industry, especially when compared to long-established companies like IBM and HP. As such, Dell still has a lot of room for expansion in certain areas, especially the non-PC segment and international markets. These segments have been showing higher growth potential than the domestic PC market in which Dell has historically been concentrated.
On that note, Dell has shown a major interest in expanding their global exposure. Dell has signed a deal with WalMart Stores (WMT) to sell Dell desktops and notebooks in Brazil and Mexico.[15] Dell has also signed a deal with Gome Group, which is the largest electronics retailer in China.[16] Currently Dell has 24,000 retail stores around the world, with a much bigger reach thanks to its partnerships and collaborations.
Developing countries boost computer sales
Dell continues to pursue international sales through a variety of means. In addition to distribution agreements with large retailers, Dell has developed a number of products specifically targeted at emerging markets. The best example of this is the Dell 500 notebook, a low cost laptop designed to be affordable for a large phase of the population of developing countries. Such initiatives have proven successful for Dell; unit sales for emerging markets grew 62% during the first quarter of 2008. With revenue in India and China growing 52% and 30%, respectively, for the same period. Despite this stellar performance there is still much room for growth, since only 5.1% of Indians and 9% of Chinese have computers, compared to 75% of Americans.[17] Furthermore, 85% of the world's population lives in developing markets.[18]
In 2010, Dell expects that revenues in China, which is its second largest market, to be $5 billion. Dell will spend $25 billion in deals with Chinese suppliers and partners. Dell supplies 60% of the servers used by China's internet companies. In 4Q10, Dell sales in China increased 81% due to government incentives to boost spending.[19]
Dell has a variety of non-PC products with room for growth
Within Dell’s portfolio of offerings, non-PC products and services are showing larger growth potential than the company’s PC segment, which currently accounts for 60% of sales. Dell is responding to this increased demand in the non-PC segment, expanding its line of servers, peripherals and accessories, and customer support services. These account for a smaller percentage of Dell’s revenue, leaving room for continued growth. In addition, margins on these goods and services are generally higher, especially for technical support services. The higher profitability and increased demand in the non-PC segment could bolster Dell’s earnings significantly if the company continues to improve its offerings in the segment.
Dell has agreed to acquire EqualLogic, a data networking systems company, for $1.4 billion.[20] This acquisition is an attempt to enhance Dell's offering in data storage, which only accounted for 4% of sales in Fiscal 2008.[21] The main customer demographic is expected to be medium sized companies that cannot afford the more expensive data storage systems.
Outsourcing to increase profit takes power from Dell
The PC market has become intensely competitive, especially in the United States. Dell must keep its prices competitive or risk losing business to competitors, putting pressure on Dell to cut production costs wherever possible. Following industry trends, Dell has begun outsourcing more components to third parties in order to lower its costs of production. Unlike other leading PC manufacturers, such as Hewlett-Packard Company (HPQ) or Apple (AAPL), Dell still assembles its own final products.[22] In order to try and close the resultant gap in production costs, especially for highly demanded notebooks, Dell announced plans in September 2008 to sell its factories worldwide to various contract producers.[23]
The purpose of this outsourcing is to minimize production costs, increasing profit margins and allowing the company to reduce prices. On the other hand, Dell’s increasing reliance on its technology partners can decrease its control over the supply chain as a whole. As more components are outsourced to third parties, Dell loses some of its control over both prices and the overall production process.
A suffering economy results in declining PC sales and a rise in Netbook sales
PC sales and prices are declining. As it stands, IDC already expects PC sales to be down 5.3 pct in 2009 as consumers search for cheaper units in a bad economy.[24] Netbooks are a new type of portable computer, that are cheap, light weight, and easy to use. In Q3 2008, shipments of netbooks grew 160%, overtaking iPhone sales by 900,000 units.[25] [26] Consequently, the sales of netbooks are driving notebook prices down. The average selling price for a portable computer is $1,106, and IDC predicts that this will drop 8% to $1,018 in 2008, and an additional 12% next year, partly because of netbooks.[27] A shift to netbooks would be detrimental to Dell, who only has a 2.8% market share in the shipments of netbooks, as compared to a 32% market share in the combined shipment of netbooks and notebooks.[28]
U.S. Government spending on digitizing health records may secure revenue for Dell
In an effort to counter the fall of personal computers and server sales, Dell will make a strategic acquisition that will allow it to obtain a piece of the U.S. government’s stimulus. As part of the U.S. stimulus, the government is spending $19 billion over the next five years into technology that will digitize medical records.[29] To get a piece of this, Dell will purchase Perot Systems, a provider of technology services with specialty in electronic health records, for $3.9 billion; Perot services 1,000 hospitals and automates patient records for 200,000 doctors.[30] This will secure revenue for Dell which has had difficulty during the downturn.
Competition
Dell’s competition varies in its different segments. However, its largest competitors overall are Hewlett-Packard, International Business Machines, and Lenovo Group (LNVGY). Hewlett-Packard's recent acquisition of Electronic Data Systems (EDS) will create difficulties for Dell, as previously Dell had an agreement to sell its PCs and other hardware through EDS. Since HPQ will likely be unwilling to market Dell's products through its subsidiary this buyout will cause a loss of sales for Dell.
PCs
Dell is the second-largest vendor of PCs worldwide (barely ahead of Acer) with 8,789 PCs shipped (estimated) in the first quarter of 2009, coming second to Hewlett-Packard who commands an 19.8% market share and shipped 13,305 PCs.[31] Dell’s other significant competitors in the PC market include Lenovo Group (LNVGY), Acer, Toshiba, and Apple.
Dell and Acer finished within 0.1 % points of each other, this close finish is explained by the different business practices followed by the two companies. The weak world economy has hurt Dell's heavy reliance on the professional market for its sales while Acer has increased its numbers because of higher sales numbers for its low priced mobile PCs in Middle East and Africa (EMEA) and the U.S.
Worldwide PC Vendor Unit Shipments for 2009 and US PC Vendor Shipments for 4Q09[32]
Notebooks
In notebooks, the top nine companies hold about 85.5% of the global market, and the segment has shown strong growth, attributable to sales in developed countries and the proliferation of wireless access.[33] To compete with Apple's many small computing products, in August 2008 Dell began selling a series of Ultra-portable laptops that weigh about 2 pounds and have 19 hours of battery life.[34] Dell also has a major initiative to tackle the designer 13-inch notebook market, specifically through its Adamo notebook, which is an ultraportable and will be marketed as the "world's thinnest laptop" in order to compete with Apple's MacBook Air.[35]
Servers
Dell is a relative newcomer to the server market. In the server market, Dell is behind HP, IBM, and Sun Microsystems, accounting for just 12.3% of revenues in the server market in the first quarter of 2008.[36]Dell’s server offerings are aimed at the low-end market segment, which includes servers that cost less than $25,000. This segment has shown strong growth as quality in the segment increases, resulting in declining demand for high-end servers.
Tablet
In May 2010, Dell announced that it will be releasing a 5-inch touchscreen device known as the Streak in June. The Dell Streak uses a customized version of Google's Android mobile operating system. Dell's streak will compete with Apple's iPad.[37]
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
SCIENCE QUIZ 36
uestion: Which animal produces the biggest baby?
Answer: Blue Whale
Question: Which metal do you get from bauxite?
Answer: Aluminium
Question: What colour does acid turn Litmus paper?
Answer: Red
Answer: Blue Whale
Question: Which metal do you get from bauxite?
Answer: Aluminium
Question: What colour does acid turn Litmus paper?
Answer: Red
SCIENCE QUIZ 35
Question: If a creature is edentulous what has it not got?
Answer: Teeth
Question: The character Shylock appears in which Shakespeare play?
Answer: The Merchant Of Venice
Question: What type of animal is a Saki?
Answer: A monkey
Question: What is the second largest island in the world?
Answer: New Guinea (Greenland is the largest)
Question: Haptic relates to which of the five senses?
Answer: Touch
Question: How many teeth does an elephant have?
Answer: 4
Question: Pershore, Victoria and Washington are types of which fruit?
Answer: Plum
Question: How many hearts does an octopus have?
Answer: 3
Question: Who discovered the rabies vaccination?
Answer: Louis Pasteur (1885)
Question: What is the name of the process used for clarifying beer or wine?
Answer: Fining
Question: The Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratory is better known by which name?
Answer: Jodrell Bank
Question: Which is the largest Fresh water lake in the world?
Answer: Superior
Question: The neutered male of which animal is called 'a Barrow'?
Answer: Pig
Question: What name is given to the negative electrode of an electrolytic cell?
Answer: Cathode
Question: What is the correct name for a rabbit's tail?
Answer: Scut
Question: Which chemical element has the shortest name - 3 letters?
Answer: Tin
Question: What word do we use to describe the Asexual reproduction of a genetic carbon copy of an animal or plant?
Answer: Clone
Question: What is calcium carbonate normally known as?
Answer: Chalk
Question: What sort of creature is a bustard?
Answer: A bird
Question: Acid rain is composed mainly of the oxides of two elements. Give either.
Answer: Sulphur or Nitrogen
Answer: Teeth
Question: The character Shylock appears in which Shakespeare play?
Answer: The Merchant Of Venice
Question: What type of animal is a Saki?
Answer: A monkey
Question: What is the second largest island in the world?
Answer: New Guinea (Greenland is the largest)
Question: Haptic relates to which of the five senses?
Answer: Touch
Question: How many teeth does an elephant have?
Answer: 4
Question: Pershore, Victoria and Washington are types of which fruit?
Answer: Plum
Question: How many hearts does an octopus have?
Answer: 3
Question: Who discovered the rabies vaccination?
Answer: Louis Pasteur (1885)
Question: What is the name of the process used for clarifying beer or wine?
Answer: Fining
Question: The Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratory is better known by which name?
Answer: Jodrell Bank
Question: Which is the largest Fresh water lake in the world?
Answer: Superior
Question: The neutered male of which animal is called 'a Barrow'?
Answer: Pig
Question: What name is given to the negative electrode of an electrolytic cell?
Answer: Cathode
Question: What is the correct name for a rabbit's tail?
Answer: Scut
Question: Which chemical element has the shortest name - 3 letters?
Answer: Tin
Question: What word do we use to describe the Asexual reproduction of a genetic carbon copy of an animal or plant?
Answer: Clone
Question: What is calcium carbonate normally known as?
Answer: Chalk
Question: What sort of creature is a bustard?
Answer: A bird
Question: Acid rain is composed mainly of the oxides of two elements. Give either.
Answer: Sulphur or Nitrogen
SCIENCE QUIZ 34
Question: Cacti are native to which country?
Answer: Mexico
Question: What type of creature is a 'clouded yellow'?
Answer: A butterfly
Question: Through which organ do fish get oxygen?
Answer: Gills
Question: What is a Wessex Saddleback?
Answer: A pig
Question: Which gentle water creature gives its name to a Florida river?
Answer: Manatee (Known as a sea cow)
Question: Which glands produce white blood cells?
Answer: Lymph glands
Question: What type of creature is a Guillemot?
Answer: A bird
Question: Which planet is closest to the sun?
Answer: Mercury
Question: How is the number 14 written in Roman numerals?
Answer: XIV
Question: What is the process known as whereby plants make food using light?
Answer: Photosynthesis
Question: How many humps does a Bactrian camel have?
Answer: 2
Question: What units are used to measure sound intensity?
Answer: Decibels
Question: Which animal’s milk is used to make authentic Italian mozzarella cheese?
Answer: Water buffalo
Question: What's the 2nd heaviest land Animal?
Answer: Rhinoceros (up to 5 tons, then hippo up to 3.2 tons)
Question: Which branch of Medicine is concerned with providing artificial limbs for the body?
Answer: Prosthetics
Question: What every-day item was named after Mrs Gamp in Charles Dickens' Martin Chuzzlewit?
Answer: the umbrella
Question: What type of creature is an alewife?
Answer: A fish (of the herring family found off North America's Atlantic coast)
Question: Brock is a nickname for which animal?
Answer: A badger
Question: In the human body what is Varicella commonly known as?
Answer: Chicken Pox
Question: What is a baby seal called?
Answer: A pup
Answer: Mexico
Question: What type of creature is a 'clouded yellow'?
Answer: A butterfly
Question: Through which organ do fish get oxygen?
Answer: Gills
Question: What is a Wessex Saddleback?
Answer: A pig
Question: Which gentle water creature gives its name to a Florida river?
Answer: Manatee (Known as a sea cow)
Question: Which glands produce white blood cells?
Answer: Lymph glands
Question: What type of creature is a Guillemot?
Answer: A bird
Question: Which planet is closest to the sun?
Answer: Mercury
Question: How is the number 14 written in Roman numerals?
Answer: XIV
Question: What is the process known as whereby plants make food using light?
Answer: Photosynthesis
Question: How many humps does a Bactrian camel have?
Answer: 2
Question: What units are used to measure sound intensity?
Answer: Decibels
Question: Which animal’s milk is used to make authentic Italian mozzarella cheese?
Answer: Water buffalo
Question: What's the 2nd heaviest land Animal?
Answer: Rhinoceros (up to 5 tons, then hippo up to 3.2 tons)
Question: Which branch of Medicine is concerned with providing artificial limbs for the body?
Answer: Prosthetics
Question: What every-day item was named after Mrs Gamp in Charles Dickens' Martin Chuzzlewit?
Answer: the umbrella
Question: What type of creature is an alewife?
Answer: A fish (of the herring family found off North America's Atlantic coast)
Question: Brock is a nickname for which animal?
Answer: A badger
Question: In the human body what is Varicella commonly known as?
Answer: Chicken Pox
Question: What is a baby seal called?
Answer: A pup
SCIENCE QUIZ 33
Question: What colour do you get if you mix blue and yellow paint?
Answer: Green
Question: What's the Chemical symbol for Potassium?
Answer: K
Question: What word is used in international radio communications to denote the letter L?
Answer: Lima
Question: On a standard computer keyboard, which key is the largest?
Answer: The space bar.
Question: What is a freshwater lobster called?
Answer: Crayfish - Crayfish live in freshwater rivers and streams in temperate climates
Question: What did Albert Parkhouse invent that is one of the most stolen items from hotels?
Answer: Coat hanger
Question: What is the name of Microsoft's free e-mail service?
Answer: Hotmail (not Outlook; that is software to collect any Email)
Question: Which organ uses 25% of our oxygen supply?
Answer: Brain
Question: How many legs does every true insect have?
Answer: 6
Question: How is 12 months travelling at 186,000 miles per second better known?
Answer: One light year
Question: What’s a young kangaroo called?
Answer: A joey
Question: Scientists claim that every minute, about 900 million tons of what hits the earth?
Answer: Rain
Question: If you had one nickel, two dimes and a quarter, how much would you have in total?
Answer: 50 cents
Question: What does a 'Pluvio meter' measure?
Answer: Rainfall
Question: Which drug is named after the Greek God of Dreams?
Answer: Morphine
Question: Which poisonous substance is also known as 'Woolly Rock'?
Answer: Asbestos
Question: What is the name of a whale's breathing organ?
Answer: Lungs
Question: Sardines and pilchards belong to which family of fish?
Answer: Herring
Question: What is a 'Spinney'?
Answer: A small wood or thicket with undergrowth
Question: What name is given to an angle greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees?
Answer: Obtuse
Answer: Green
Question: What's the Chemical symbol for Potassium?
Answer: K
Question: What word is used in international radio communications to denote the letter L?
Answer: Lima
Question: On a standard computer keyboard, which key is the largest?
Answer: The space bar.
Question: What is a freshwater lobster called?
Answer: Crayfish - Crayfish live in freshwater rivers and streams in temperate climates
Question: What did Albert Parkhouse invent that is one of the most stolen items from hotels?
Answer: Coat hanger
Question: What is the name of Microsoft's free e-mail service?
Answer: Hotmail (not Outlook; that is software to collect any Email)
Question: Which organ uses 25% of our oxygen supply?
Answer: Brain
Question: How many legs does every true insect have?
Answer: 6
Question: How is 12 months travelling at 186,000 miles per second better known?
Answer: One light year
Question: What’s a young kangaroo called?
Answer: A joey
Question: Scientists claim that every minute, about 900 million tons of what hits the earth?
Answer: Rain
Question: If you had one nickel, two dimes and a quarter, how much would you have in total?
Answer: 50 cents
Question: What does a 'Pluvio meter' measure?
Answer: Rainfall
Question: Which drug is named after the Greek God of Dreams?
Answer: Morphine
Question: Which poisonous substance is also known as 'Woolly Rock'?
Answer: Asbestos
Question: What is the name of a whale's breathing organ?
Answer: Lungs
Question: Sardines and pilchards belong to which family of fish?
Answer: Herring
Question: What is a 'Spinney'?
Answer: A small wood or thicket with undergrowth
Question: What name is given to an angle greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees?
Answer: Obtuse
SCIENCE QUIZ 32
Question: What is the name given to a succession of involuntary spasms of the diaphragm causing a characeristic sound?
Answer: Hiccup
Question: Which device measures the density of liquids?
Answer: Hydrometer
Question: What word describes an objects ability to return to its original shape after being stretched or compressed?
Answer: Elasticity or Elastic constant
Question: How many teeth should a normal healthy adult have?
Answer: 32
Question: What word is used to describe an angle between 90 and 180 degrees?
Answer: Obtuse
Question: How many prime numbers are there between 10 and 20?
Answer: Four (11, 13, 17 and 19)
Question: How many notes are there in a musical scale?
Answer: 8
Question: Seismograph
Answer: Seismograph
Question: What is the name given to a triangle where all the sides are of different length?
Answer: Scalene
Question: How is 120% expressed as a Fraction in lowest common denominator?
Answer: 6/5
Question: Where is the only place that the American flag flies 24 hours a day - never raised, never lowered, and never saluted?
Answer: On the Moon
Question: Before the terrorist attack how many stories high were the World Trade Centre’s twin towers?
Answer: 110
Question: What speed were the 1st records played at
Answer: 78 rpm
Question: Who's 3rd law states that every action has an equal and opposite reaction?
Answer: Newton’s law of motion
Question: What is the name of the flap of cartilage which prevents food from entering your windpipe?
Answer: Epiglottis
Question: What was Apollo 11's landing module called?
Answer: Eagle
Question: In which galaxy is the Earth?
Answer: The Milky Way
Question: What would you suffer from if you had dichromatic vision?
Answer: Colour Blindness
Question: What is manufactured by (red) bone marrow? Yellow marrow is just fat.
Answer: Blood Cells - red, white and platelets (clotting agents
Question: What is or was Breitling Orbiter 3?
Answer: The name of the balloon which circumnavigated the Earth in 1999
Answer: Hiccup
Question: Which device measures the density of liquids?
Answer: Hydrometer
Question: What word describes an objects ability to return to its original shape after being stretched or compressed?
Answer: Elasticity or Elastic constant
Question: How many teeth should a normal healthy adult have?
Answer: 32
Question: What word is used to describe an angle between 90 and 180 degrees?
Answer: Obtuse
Question: How many prime numbers are there between 10 and 20?
Answer: Four (11, 13, 17 and 19)
Question: How many notes are there in a musical scale?
Answer: 8
Question: Seismograph
Answer: Seismograph
Question: What is the name given to a triangle where all the sides are of different length?
Answer: Scalene
Question: How is 120% expressed as a Fraction in lowest common denominator?
Answer: 6/5
Question: Where is the only place that the American flag flies 24 hours a day - never raised, never lowered, and never saluted?
Answer: On the Moon
Question: Before the terrorist attack how many stories high were the World Trade Centre’s twin towers?
Answer: 110
Question: What speed were the 1st records played at
Answer: 78 rpm
Question: Who's 3rd law states that every action has an equal and opposite reaction?
Answer: Newton’s law of motion
Question: What is the name of the flap of cartilage which prevents food from entering your windpipe?
Answer: Epiglottis
Question: What was Apollo 11's landing module called?
Answer: Eagle
Question: In which galaxy is the Earth?
Answer: The Milky Way
Question: What would you suffer from if you had dichromatic vision?
Answer: Colour Blindness
Question: What is manufactured by (red) bone marrow? Yellow marrow is just fat.
Answer: Blood Cells - red, white and platelets (clotting agents
Question: What is or was Breitling Orbiter 3?
Answer: The name of the balloon which circumnavigated the Earth in 1999
SCIENCE QUIZ 31
Question: What creature is said to the have the most legs?
Answer: Millipede
Question: What kind of nut grows on an oak tree?
Answer: An Acorn
Question: Which branch of Medicine is concerned with providing artificial limbs for the body?
Answer: Prosthetics
Question: Which maritime measure of speed is equal to one nautical mile per hour?
Answer: Knot
Question: What is the medical term for German Measles?
Answer: Rubella
Question: What are the young of Whales called?
Answer: Calves
Question: How many old pennies are there in a guinea?
Answer: 252
Question: Who said, *If I have seen further than others it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants*?
Answer: Sir Isaac Newton
Question: What are the three primary colours of light? (For pigments it’s Yellow not Green).
Answer: Red, Blue and Green. If light of these primary colours is added together in roughly equal intensities, the sensation of white light is produced.
Question: What is acclaimed to be the most ferocious fresh water fish?
Answer: Piranha
Question: There are 3 types of adult honeybee, Queen and worker are two. What's the other?
Answer: Drone
Question: What is a Marmoset?
Answer: A type of monkey
Question: What is the name given to the imaginary line of 180 degrees longitude?
Answer: International Date Line
Question: What is the name for a stationary electrical charge, which builds up on an insulated object?
Answer: Static
Question: In the animal kingdom, which large rodent is also known as the ‘Quill Pig’?
Answer: Porcupine
Question: What is the smallest living unit called?
Answer: A Cell
Question: In nature, the earth is composed of 3 main parts, the Crust, the mantle and what?
Answer: The Core
Question: What is the next number in the sequence (1,1,2,3,5,8,)?
Answer: 13 (Sum of previous 2 numbers)
Question: What is special about the feet of a 'Palmiped'?
Answer: Webbed
Question: A molecule of water contains how many atoms of Oxygen?
Answer: 1
Answer: Millipede
Question: What kind of nut grows on an oak tree?
Answer: An Acorn
Question: Which branch of Medicine is concerned with providing artificial limbs for the body?
Answer: Prosthetics
Question: Which maritime measure of speed is equal to one nautical mile per hour?
Answer: Knot
Question: What is the medical term for German Measles?
Answer: Rubella
Question: What are the young of Whales called?
Answer: Calves
Question: How many old pennies are there in a guinea?
Answer: 252
Question: Who said, *If I have seen further than others it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants*?
Answer: Sir Isaac Newton
Question: What are the three primary colours of light? (For pigments it’s Yellow not Green).
Answer: Red, Blue and Green. If light of these primary colours is added together in roughly equal intensities, the sensation of white light is produced.
Question: What is acclaimed to be the most ferocious fresh water fish?
Answer: Piranha
Question: There are 3 types of adult honeybee, Queen and worker are two. What's the other?
Answer: Drone
Question: What is a Marmoset?
Answer: A type of monkey
Question: What is the name given to the imaginary line of 180 degrees longitude?
Answer: International Date Line
Question: What is the name for a stationary electrical charge, which builds up on an insulated object?
Answer: Static
Question: In the animal kingdom, which large rodent is also known as the ‘Quill Pig’?
Answer: Porcupine
Question: What is the smallest living unit called?
Answer: A Cell
Question: In nature, the earth is composed of 3 main parts, the Crust, the mantle and what?
Answer: The Core
Question: What is the next number in the sequence (1,1,2,3,5,8,)?
Answer: 13 (Sum of previous 2 numbers)
Question: What is special about the feet of a 'Palmiped'?
Answer: Webbed
Question: A molecule of water contains how many atoms of Oxygen?
Answer: 1
SCIENCE QUIZ 30
Question: Who invented the jet engine?
Answer: Sir Frank Whittle
Question: When is the Blue Peter Flown?
Answer: When a ship is about to leave Port
Question: What is a cross between a collie and a greyhound called?
Answer: Lurcher
Question: Which planet normally lies between Saturn and Neptune?
Answer: Uranus
Question: In science, a substance dissolved in another substance is known as what?
Answer: Solute
Question: What will be the next year that reads the same upside down and back to front as it does the right way up?
Answer: 6009
Question: What do the initials HB stand for on a pencil?
Answer: Hard Black
Question: A mixture of ground chalk and raw linseed oil is known better as what?
Answer: Putty
Question: Which is the only bird, capable of rotating its neck through 270º?
Answer: Owl
Question: Bubbles of which gaseous element are responsible for the condition of divers (amongst others) known as 'The Bends'?
Answer: Nitrogen (It is also known as Caisson disease and medically as aeroembolism.
Question: Which part of a man's anatomy remains the same size from birth?
Answer: His eyes (this is also true of females)
Question: From which wood were longbows traditionally made?
Answer: Yew
Question: What is Deoxyribonucleic Acid better and more commonly known as?
Answer: DNA
Question: The worlds largest fruit is called the love fruit or the Coco de Mer, and can weigh up to 50 pounds (23kg). Which is the only Country it grows in?
Answer: Seychelles
Question: What are the 'aurora borealis' also known as?
Answer: Northern Lights - high-altitude luminosity occurring most frequently above 60° north or south latitude.
Question: What name is given to the envelope of gases which surrounds the Earth or another celestial body?
Answer: Atmosphere
Question: What term is used for the result of multiplying two or more numbers?
Answer: Product
Question: How many milligrams are in one gram?
Answer: 1000
Question: What is the main crop of the Greek island of Corfu?
Answer: Olives
Question: What is the term for a group of whales?
Answer: Pod
Answer: Sir Frank Whittle
Question: When is the Blue Peter Flown?
Answer: When a ship is about to leave Port
Question: What is a cross between a collie and a greyhound called?
Answer: Lurcher
Question: Which planet normally lies between Saturn and Neptune?
Answer: Uranus
Question: In science, a substance dissolved in another substance is known as what?
Answer: Solute
Question: What will be the next year that reads the same upside down and back to front as it does the right way up?
Answer: 6009
Question: What do the initials HB stand for on a pencil?
Answer: Hard Black
Question: A mixture of ground chalk and raw linseed oil is known better as what?
Answer: Putty
Question: Which is the only bird, capable of rotating its neck through 270º?
Answer: Owl
Question: Bubbles of which gaseous element are responsible for the condition of divers (amongst others) known as 'The Bends'?
Answer: Nitrogen (It is also known as Caisson disease and medically as aeroembolism.
Question: Which part of a man's anatomy remains the same size from birth?
Answer: His eyes (this is also true of females)
Question: From which wood were longbows traditionally made?
Answer: Yew
Question: What is Deoxyribonucleic Acid better and more commonly known as?
Answer: DNA
Question: The worlds largest fruit is called the love fruit or the Coco de Mer, and can weigh up to 50 pounds (23kg). Which is the only Country it grows in?
Answer: Seychelles
Question: What are the 'aurora borealis' also known as?
Answer: Northern Lights - high-altitude luminosity occurring most frequently above 60° north or south latitude.
Question: What name is given to the envelope of gases which surrounds the Earth or another celestial body?
Answer: Atmosphere
Question: What term is used for the result of multiplying two or more numbers?
Answer: Product
Question: How many milligrams are in one gram?
Answer: 1000
Question: What is the main crop of the Greek island of Corfu?
Answer: Olives
Question: What is the term for a group of whales?
Answer: Pod
SCIENCE QUIZ 29
Question: What is the chemical symbol for the element Potassium?
Answer: K
Question: What type of creature is a Garibaldi?
Answer: A fish
Question: Founded in Canada in 1971, and now with its headquarters in Amsterdam, what was the original aim of the environmental organization Greenpeace?
Answer: To oppose U.S. nuclear testing in Alaska
Question: In anatomy what is the outer layer of the skin called?
Answer: Epidermis
Question: The density of which substance is measured by a lactometer?
Answer: Milk
Question: What colour is the mineral 'azurite'?
Answer: Blue
Question: Dendrology is the scientific study of what?
Answer: Trees
Question: What colour is the cabbage moth?
Answer: Brown
Question: If an object is hastate what shape is it?
Answer: Triangular
Question: In electronics what does LED stand for?
Answer: Light Emitting Diode
Question: Reynard is a nickname for which animal?
Answer: A fox
Question: What is the male part of a flower called?
Answer: Stamen
Question: In the world of nature what is a Camberwell beauty?
Answer: A butterfly
Question: What is a tree or shrub called that sheds its leaves annually?
Answer: Deciduous
Question: What planet is nearest to the Sun?
Answer: Mercury
Question: What is converted into alcohol during brewing
Answer: Sugar
Question: What colour is the mineral 'malachite'?
Answer: Green
Question: Which fruit is a cross between a peach and a plum?
Answer: Nectarine
Question: What is the most obvious symptom that shows, when you contract jaundice?
Answer: You turn a yellow colour
Question: What is the bony substance in a tooth just beneath the enamel?
Answer: Dentine
Answer: K
Question: What type of creature is a Garibaldi?
Answer: A fish
Question: Founded in Canada in 1971, and now with its headquarters in Amsterdam, what was the original aim of the environmental organization Greenpeace?
Answer: To oppose U.S. nuclear testing in Alaska
Question: In anatomy what is the outer layer of the skin called?
Answer: Epidermis
Question: The density of which substance is measured by a lactometer?
Answer: Milk
Question: What colour is the mineral 'azurite'?
Answer: Blue
Question: Dendrology is the scientific study of what?
Answer: Trees
Question: What colour is the cabbage moth?
Answer: Brown
Question: If an object is hastate what shape is it?
Answer: Triangular
Question: In electronics what does LED stand for?
Answer: Light Emitting Diode
Question: Reynard is a nickname for which animal?
Answer: A fox
Question: What is the male part of a flower called?
Answer: Stamen
Question: In the world of nature what is a Camberwell beauty?
Answer: A butterfly
Question: What is a tree or shrub called that sheds its leaves annually?
Answer: Deciduous
Question: What planet is nearest to the Sun?
Answer: Mercury
Question: What is converted into alcohol during brewing
Answer: Sugar
Question: What colour is the mineral 'malachite'?
Answer: Green
Question: Which fruit is a cross between a peach and a plum?
Answer: Nectarine
Question: What is the most obvious symptom that shows, when you contract jaundice?
Answer: You turn a yellow colour
Question: What is the bony substance in a tooth just beneath the enamel?
Answer: Dentine
SCIENCE QUIZ 28
Question: Which President's name is inscribed on the 1969 Apollo 11 moon plaque?
Answer: Richard Nixon
Question: What is the main emission of a car engine after Catalytic exhaust purification?
Answer: Nitrogen
Question: What is a blue moon?
Answer: If there are two full moons in one calendar month the 2nd is called a Blue Moon
Question: What is Cryogenics?
Answer: The scientific name for the study of extremely low temperatures
Question: What colour is the inside of a pistachio nut?
Answer: Green
Question: What colour is cayenne pepper?
Answer: Red
Question: Which childhood disease has the same virus as Shingles?
Answer: Chicken Pox
Question: Which part of the human body shares its name with a punctuation mark?
Answer: Colon
Question: What colour tongues do giraffes have?
Answer: Blue
Question: What do the initials 'BHP' stand for?
Answer: Brake horse power
Question: If you 'nictitate' at someone, what do you do?
Answer: Wink
Question: Excess bile pigment in the blood causes which illness?
Answer: Jaundice
Question: Which scientific word relates to the structure of the human body?
Answer: Anatomy
Question: How many square feet are there in a square yard?
Answer: 9
Question: What did Adam not have that every other man does have?
Answer: A belly button or Navel
Question: What is a butterfly larvae more commonly known as?
Answer: Catterpillar
Question: What do 'polled' cattle not have?
Answer: Horns
Question: What is the term used to describe a plant that has been crossed with different species?
Answer: Hybrid
Question: What number is represented in Roman Numerals by the letter 'D'?
Answer: 50
Question: In the human body what is the Axilla commonly known as?
Answer: The armpit
Answer: Richard Nixon
Question: What is the main emission of a car engine after Catalytic exhaust purification?
Answer: Nitrogen
Question: What is a blue moon?
Answer: If there are two full moons in one calendar month the 2nd is called a Blue Moon
Question: What is Cryogenics?
Answer: The scientific name for the study of extremely low temperatures
Question: What colour is the inside of a pistachio nut?
Answer: Green
Question: What colour is cayenne pepper?
Answer: Red
Question: Which childhood disease has the same virus as Shingles?
Answer: Chicken Pox
Question: Which part of the human body shares its name with a punctuation mark?
Answer: Colon
Question: What colour tongues do giraffes have?
Answer: Blue
Question: What do the initials 'BHP' stand for?
Answer: Brake horse power
Question: If you 'nictitate' at someone, what do you do?
Answer: Wink
Question: Excess bile pigment in the blood causes which illness?
Answer: Jaundice
Question: Which scientific word relates to the structure of the human body?
Answer: Anatomy
Question: How many square feet are there in a square yard?
Answer: 9
Question: What did Adam not have that every other man does have?
Answer: A belly button or Navel
Question: What is a butterfly larvae more commonly known as?
Answer: Catterpillar
Question: What do 'polled' cattle not have?
Answer: Horns
Question: What is the term used to describe a plant that has been crossed with different species?
Answer: Hybrid
Question: What number is represented in Roman Numerals by the letter 'D'?
Answer: 50
Question: In the human body what is the Axilla commonly known as?
Answer: The armpit
SCIENCE QUIZ 27
Question: Called Nanook by the indigenous population, what do we better know it as?
Answer: Polar Bear
Question: What are normally the species with the longest life span?
Answer: Tortoises and turtles - they often live to well over a hundred years old.
Question: Apart from the coconut, what is the only other fruit to grow on a palm tree?
Answer: Dates. We also get sago, and vegetable oil used in making margarine and soap from palms but they are not fruits.
Question: What is the common name given to thyroid cartilage?
Answer: he Adam's apple. Just below the epiglottis is the angular thyroid cartilage, composed of two vertical plates that join in the front of the neck.
Question: What name is given to the front teeth between the canines?
Answer: Incisors
Question: What name is given to a doctor that specialises in children’s diseases?
Answer: Paediatrician
Question: What is the only country that represents a letter in the NATO phonetic alphabet?
Answer: India
Question: Priapism affects which part of the body?
Answer: Penis. It's a constant often painful erection. Priapus in Greek mythology, god of fertility, He was represented as a grotesque individual with a huge phallus. The Romans set up crude images of Priapus gardens, to serve as scarecrows.
Question: Which animal is the official emblem of Canada? (Not referring to the maple leaf)
Answer: The beaver
Question: Which cartoon character lived on Sweetwater island and was the son of Poopdeck Pappy?
Answer: Popeye
Question: Which is the most common element on Earth after oxygen?
Answer: Silicon. It constitutes about 28% of the Earth's crust. 90% igneous-rock, Silicon dioxide is the principal constituent of sand
Question: What is Britain's largest native carnivore?
Answer: Badger
Question: What does the acronym SCUBA stand for?
Answer: Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus
Question: Which substance is the main product of the Haber-Bosch process?
Answer: Ammonia
Question: What was the name of Sir Clive Sinclair's electric tricycle, launched in 1985?
Answer: The C5
Question: What type of fruit is a jargonelle?
Answer: A pear
Question: Which is the only sea mammal lacking an insulating layer of blubber?
Answer: Sea Otter
Question: The gall bladder is attached to which organ of the human body?
Answer: Liver
Question: What is the term given to the appearance of wounds or scars corresponding to those of the crucified Christ on a human's body?
Answer: Stigmata
Question: True or false…electric eels actually produce electricity?
Answer: True
Answer: Polar Bear
Question: What are normally the species with the longest life span?
Answer: Tortoises and turtles - they often live to well over a hundred years old.
Question: Apart from the coconut, what is the only other fruit to grow on a palm tree?
Answer: Dates. We also get sago, and vegetable oil used in making margarine and soap from palms but they are not fruits.
Question: What is the common name given to thyroid cartilage?
Answer: he Adam's apple. Just below the epiglottis is the angular thyroid cartilage, composed of two vertical plates that join in the front of the neck.
Question: What name is given to the front teeth between the canines?
Answer: Incisors
Question: What name is given to a doctor that specialises in children’s diseases?
Answer: Paediatrician
Question: What is the only country that represents a letter in the NATO phonetic alphabet?
Answer: India
Question: Priapism affects which part of the body?
Answer: Penis. It's a constant often painful erection. Priapus in Greek mythology, god of fertility, He was represented as a grotesque individual with a huge phallus. The Romans set up crude images of Priapus gardens, to serve as scarecrows.
Question: Which animal is the official emblem of Canada? (Not referring to the maple leaf)
Answer: The beaver
Question: Which cartoon character lived on Sweetwater island and was the son of Poopdeck Pappy?
Answer: Popeye
Question: Which is the most common element on Earth after oxygen?
Answer: Silicon. It constitutes about 28% of the Earth's crust. 90% igneous-rock, Silicon dioxide is the principal constituent of sand
Question: What is Britain's largest native carnivore?
Answer: Badger
Question: What does the acronym SCUBA stand for?
Answer: Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus
Question: Which substance is the main product of the Haber-Bosch process?
Answer: Ammonia
Question: What was the name of Sir Clive Sinclair's electric tricycle, launched in 1985?
Answer: The C5
Question: What type of fruit is a jargonelle?
Answer: A pear
Question: Which is the only sea mammal lacking an insulating layer of blubber?
Answer: Sea Otter
Question: The gall bladder is attached to which organ of the human body?
Answer: Liver
Question: What is the term given to the appearance of wounds or scars corresponding to those of the crucified Christ on a human's body?
Answer: Stigmata
Question: True or false…electric eels actually produce electricity?
Answer: True
SCIENCE QUIZ 26
Question: A Quiver is the collective name for which sea creature?
Answer: Jelly fish
Question: Which (sometimes fatal) disease derives its name from the Italian for, bad air?
Answer: Mal-aria
Question: HMS Dreadnought was Britain's 1st what?
Answer: Nuclear Powered Submarine
Question: What name is given to the 'halo' of gas that surrounds the sun?
Answer: Corona
Question: What is the full name of the SARS virus disease, which originated in China and Hong Kong in early 2003?
Answer: Severe acute respiratory syndrome
Question: In which country is the Amazon rainforest?
Answer: Brazil
Question: Car satellite navigation relies on GPS - what does GPS stand for?
Answer: Global Postioning System
Question: What is the correct technical term for the art of making and the displaying of fireworks?
Answer: Pyrotechnics
Question: What name is given to the Medical condition when you suffer from a dangerous loss of body heat?
Answer: Hypothermia
Question: What's the next letter in this sequence 'OTTFFSSEN'
Answer: T for ten
Question: What is the speed of sound called at sea level?
Answer: Mach1
Question: In England, you can never be more than 75 miles away from what?
Answer: The sea (coastline/tidal waters)
Question: Molten rock above the earth's surface is called lava. What is it called under the earth's surface?
Answer: Magma
Question: Yuri Gagarin was the 1st man in Space, Neil Armstrong was 1st on the Moon, what was Edward White's famous "First"?
Answer: Edward (Higgins) White II was the 1st man to walk in space.
Question: What is a Blenheim orange?
Answer: Eating apple
Question: What colour light is displayed from the starboard side of a ship?
Answer: Green
Question: What is the patella bone better known as?
Answer: The kneecap
Question: Where is the Hubble telescope situated?
Answer: Orbiting the Earth - The Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the first general-purpose orbiting observatory was launched on April 24, 1990
Question: What was the 1st Hand held camera called?
Answer: A Brownie
Question: What is the type of organism that lives on or in another called?
Answer: Parasite
Answer: Jelly fish
Question: Which (sometimes fatal) disease derives its name from the Italian for, bad air?
Answer: Mal-aria
Question: HMS Dreadnought was Britain's 1st what?
Answer: Nuclear Powered Submarine
Question: What name is given to the 'halo' of gas that surrounds the sun?
Answer: Corona
Question: What is the full name of the SARS virus disease, which originated in China and Hong Kong in early 2003?
Answer: Severe acute respiratory syndrome
Question: In which country is the Amazon rainforest?
Answer: Brazil
Question: Car satellite navigation relies on GPS - what does GPS stand for?
Answer: Global Postioning System
Question: What is the correct technical term for the art of making and the displaying of fireworks?
Answer: Pyrotechnics
Question: What name is given to the Medical condition when you suffer from a dangerous loss of body heat?
Answer: Hypothermia
Question: What's the next letter in this sequence 'OTTFFSSEN'
Answer: T for ten
Question: What is the speed of sound called at sea level?
Answer: Mach1
Question: In England, you can never be more than 75 miles away from what?
Answer: The sea (coastline/tidal waters)
Question: Molten rock above the earth's surface is called lava. What is it called under the earth's surface?
Answer: Magma
Question: Yuri Gagarin was the 1st man in Space, Neil Armstrong was 1st on the Moon, what was Edward White's famous "First"?
Answer: Edward (Higgins) White II was the 1st man to walk in space.
Question: What is a Blenheim orange?
Answer: Eating apple
Question: What colour light is displayed from the starboard side of a ship?
Answer: Green
Question: What is the patella bone better known as?
Answer: The kneecap
Question: Where is the Hubble telescope situated?
Answer: Orbiting the Earth - The Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the first general-purpose orbiting observatory was launched on April 24, 1990
Question: What was the 1st Hand held camera called?
Answer: A Brownie
Question: What is the type of organism that lives on or in another called?
Answer: Parasite
SCIENCE QUIZ 25
Question: Who discovered penicillin?
Answer: Alexander Fleming
Question: Where would you hurt if you were kicked on the Tarsus?
Answer: The ankle
Question: Which of the following is the smallest paper size; A3, A4, or A5?
Answer: A5
Question: What part of the body does Silicosis affect?
Answer: The lungs
Question: What is 1999 in Roman numerals?
Answer: MCMXCIX
Question: On a standard computer keyboard, which is the largest key?
Answer: The space bar
Question: What is the main difference between monkeys and apes?
Answer: Monkeys have tails
Question: What common household item was invented by Percy Spencer in 1945?
Answer: Microwave oven
Question: Which organ of the body is responsible for the production of anti-bodies?
Answer: The spleen
Question: What is the only creature that has a tongue but cannot stick it out of its mouth?
Answer: Crocodile
Question: It is made from thermo-plastic paper and the manilla hemp used to make rope, it is designed to withstand boiling water, what is it?
Answer: A teabag
Question: What is Britain's largest freshwater fish?
Answer: The Pike
Question: What word is used for the removal of salt from seawater to produce fresh water?
Answer: Desalinisation
Question: In 1986 the world's worst nuclear disaster happened where?
Answer: Chernobyl
Question: What is the name of the optical illusion caused by atmospheric conditions?
Answer: Mirage
Question: Which is the largest Web Footed Bird in the world?
Answer: The Albatross
Question: In Mobile (cell) Phones, what does WAP stand for?
Answer: Wireless Application Protocol
Question: What name is given to an inert substance administered in place of an active drug?
Answer: Placebo
Question: What do you call the number below the line in a fraction?
Answer: Denominator
Question: Which anaesthetic was first used in 1847 to prevent patients from feeling pain whilst surgeons operated on them?
Answer: Chloroform
Answer: Alexander Fleming
Question: Where would you hurt if you were kicked on the Tarsus?
Answer: The ankle
Question: Which of the following is the smallest paper size; A3, A4, or A5?
Answer: A5
Question: What part of the body does Silicosis affect?
Answer: The lungs
Question: What is 1999 in Roman numerals?
Answer: MCMXCIX
Question: On a standard computer keyboard, which is the largest key?
Answer: The space bar
Question: What is the main difference between monkeys and apes?
Answer: Monkeys have tails
Question: What common household item was invented by Percy Spencer in 1945?
Answer: Microwave oven
Question: Which organ of the body is responsible for the production of anti-bodies?
Answer: The spleen
Question: What is the only creature that has a tongue but cannot stick it out of its mouth?
Answer: Crocodile
Question: It is made from thermo-plastic paper and the manilla hemp used to make rope, it is designed to withstand boiling water, what is it?
Answer: A teabag
Question: What is Britain's largest freshwater fish?
Answer: The Pike
Question: What word is used for the removal of salt from seawater to produce fresh water?
Answer: Desalinisation
Question: In 1986 the world's worst nuclear disaster happened where?
Answer: Chernobyl
Question: What is the name of the optical illusion caused by atmospheric conditions?
Answer: Mirage
Question: Which is the largest Web Footed Bird in the world?
Answer: The Albatross
Question: In Mobile (cell) Phones, what does WAP stand for?
Answer: Wireless Application Protocol
Question: What name is given to an inert substance administered in place of an active drug?
Answer: Placebo
Question: What do you call the number below the line in a fraction?
Answer: Denominator
Question: Which anaesthetic was first used in 1847 to prevent patients from feeling pain whilst surgeons operated on them?
Answer: Chloroform
SCIENCE QUIZ 24
Question: What's the term for the spiralling groove on the inside of a gun barrel?
Answer: Rifling
Question: What is the name given to a catalyst, which occurs in nature to regulate the speed of chemical reactions in the metabolisms of living organisms.
Answer: Enzyme
Question: A survey by a US tourism website found that almost one in four US visitors to Scotland went there in the belief they could hunt and catch which prey?
Answer: A Haggis
Question: What is the green alkaline fluid produced by the liver?
Answer: Bile
Question: What is the study of insects called?
Answer: Entomology
Question: What is the more common name for the North Atlantic Drift?
Answer: Gulf Stream
Question: What is the most common use for a Sea Cucumber?
Answer: A Loofah
Question: How many land miles are there in a League?
Answer: 3
Question: What name is given to a quadrilateral with two parallel sides of unequal length?
Answer: Trapezium
Question: What units are used to measure sound intensity?
Answer: Decibels
Question: How many degrees are there in one and three quarter revolutions
Answer: 630 (360 + 270)
Question: What word is the name given to the smallest blood vessels in the body?
Answer: Capillaries
Question: In Physics what does UV stand for ?
Answer: Ultra Violet
Question: What is the world's largest invertebrate? (No backbone)?
Answer: The giant squid. It weighs up to 2.5 tons and grows to at least 60 feet in length. Each eye is a foot or more in diameter.
Question: Name any year in which the scientist Isaac Newton was alive.
Answer: 1642-1727
Question: What endangered species of animal has varieties called Black, White, Indian & Sumatran?
Answer: Rhinoceros
Question: In mathematics, what symbol is used to denote the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter?
Answer: Pi
Question: What does a horologist do?
Answer: Makes clocks
Question: Which Foodstuff are Human Beings most allergic to?
Answer: Nuts - Anyone who is allergic to peanuts, for example, may have acute swelling of the tongue and throat, an acute asthma attack, and could possibly die after eating even a small piece of peanut or any other nut.
Question: By what other name is the abominable snowman known?
Answer: The Yeti
Answer: Rifling
Question: What is the name given to a catalyst, which occurs in nature to regulate the speed of chemical reactions in the metabolisms of living organisms.
Answer: Enzyme
Question: A survey by a US tourism website found that almost one in four US visitors to Scotland went there in the belief they could hunt and catch which prey?
Answer: A Haggis
Question: What is the green alkaline fluid produced by the liver?
Answer: Bile
Question: What is the study of insects called?
Answer: Entomology
Question: What is the more common name for the North Atlantic Drift?
Answer: Gulf Stream
Question: What is the most common use for a Sea Cucumber?
Answer: A Loofah
Question: How many land miles are there in a League?
Answer: 3
Question: What name is given to a quadrilateral with two parallel sides of unequal length?
Answer: Trapezium
Question: What units are used to measure sound intensity?
Answer: Decibels
Question: How many degrees are there in one and three quarter revolutions
Answer: 630 (360 + 270)
Question: What word is the name given to the smallest blood vessels in the body?
Answer: Capillaries
Question: In Physics what does UV stand for ?
Answer: Ultra Violet
Question: What is the world's largest invertebrate? (No backbone)?
Answer: The giant squid. It weighs up to 2.5 tons and grows to at least 60 feet in length. Each eye is a foot or more in diameter.
Question: Name any year in which the scientist Isaac Newton was alive.
Answer: 1642-1727
Question: What endangered species of animal has varieties called Black, White, Indian & Sumatran?
Answer: Rhinoceros
Question: In mathematics, what symbol is used to denote the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter?
Answer: Pi
Question: What does a horologist do?
Answer: Makes clocks
Question: Which Foodstuff are Human Beings most allergic to?
Answer: Nuts - Anyone who is allergic to peanuts, for example, may have acute swelling of the tongue and throat, an acute asthma attack, and could possibly die after eating even a small piece of peanut or any other nut.
Question: By what other name is the abominable snowman known?
Answer: The Yeti
SCIENCE QUIZ 23
Question: Why is Easter always on a Sunday between March 22 and April 25?
Answer: It's the 1st Sunday after the 1st Full moon after the vernal equinox (21st March)
Question: What is the only rock that is edible to man?
Answer: Salt
Question: What is the chemical symbol for Ozone?
Answer: 03
Question: What nationality was the first non-US, non-Soviet spaceman?
Answer: Czechoslovakian
Question: What is the name of the chief male sex hormone?
Answer: Testosterone
Question: The name of which popular bird comes from an Aboriginal word meaning 'good cockatoo'?
Answer: Budgerigar (The Australian grass parakeet)
Question: What is the most popular sport played in Nudist Camps?
Answer: Volleyball
Question: What cloth is produced from tangled moistened fibres of hair and wool, which are heated and rolled together?
Answer: Felt
Question: What is converted into alcohol during brewing?
Answer: Sugar
Question: Who discovered the Law of Gravity?
Answer: Sir Isaac Newton
Question: An insect is separated into 3 parts, the Head the Thorax and which other?
Answer: Abdomen
Question: What is the name of the monkey that gave its name to a blood group?
Answer: The Rhesus monkey
Question: What liquid is always found in a tincture?
Answer: Alcohol
Question: The 'Yard' is a measurement introduced by Henry 1st as the distance between which 2 parts of the body?
Answer: Nose to Finger
Question: How many degrees in 1 and three quarter revolutions?
Answer: 360 + 270 = 630
Question: Which domestic pest has 7 penises of assorted shapes and sizes?
Answer: Cockroach
Question: How far can a sperm swim in an hour?
Answer: 7 inches
Question: Up until the building of the Eiffel tower, which old Structure was the tallest in the world?
Answer: The Great Pyramid
Question: Which system of weight is used for precious metals?
Answer: Troy
Question: In science which K is a unit of measurement used when describing an objects mass?
Answer: Kilogram
Answer: It's the 1st Sunday after the 1st Full moon after the vernal equinox (21st March)
Question: What is the only rock that is edible to man?
Answer: Salt
Question: What is the chemical symbol for Ozone?
Answer: 03
Question: What nationality was the first non-US, non-Soviet spaceman?
Answer: Czechoslovakian
Question: What is the name of the chief male sex hormone?
Answer: Testosterone
Question: The name of which popular bird comes from an Aboriginal word meaning 'good cockatoo'?
Answer: Budgerigar (The Australian grass parakeet)
Question: What is the most popular sport played in Nudist Camps?
Answer: Volleyball
Question: What cloth is produced from tangled moistened fibres of hair and wool, which are heated and rolled together?
Answer: Felt
Question: What is converted into alcohol during brewing?
Answer: Sugar
Question: Who discovered the Law of Gravity?
Answer: Sir Isaac Newton
Question: An insect is separated into 3 parts, the Head the Thorax and which other?
Answer: Abdomen
Question: What is the name of the monkey that gave its name to a blood group?
Answer: The Rhesus monkey
Question: What liquid is always found in a tincture?
Answer: Alcohol
Question: The 'Yard' is a measurement introduced by Henry 1st as the distance between which 2 parts of the body?
Answer: Nose to Finger
Question: How many degrees in 1 and three quarter revolutions?
Answer: 360 + 270 = 630
Question: Which domestic pest has 7 penises of assorted shapes and sizes?
Answer: Cockroach
Question: How far can a sperm swim in an hour?
Answer: 7 inches
Question: Up until the building of the Eiffel tower, which old Structure was the tallest in the world?
Answer: The Great Pyramid
Question: Which system of weight is used for precious metals?
Answer: Troy
Question: In science which K is a unit of measurement used when describing an objects mass?
Answer: Kilogram
SCIENCE QUIZ 22
Question: When milk sours what acid is formed?
Answer: Lactic Acid
Question: Which short-legged dog is named after the 18 Century parson who bred them?
Answer: Jack Russel
Question: What is the light sensitive part of the eye called?
Answer: The retina
Question: When did New Year’s Eve & New Year’s Day last fall in the same year?
Answer: It happens every year!
Question: What is the outer layer of skin called?
Answer: Epidermis
Question: Is an icicle a stalagmite or a stalactite?
Answer: Satactite
Question: Which unattractive sounding fruit is a cross between a grapefruit and a tangerine?
Answer: The Ugli fruit
Question: Copper gets its name from which Mediterranean island?
Answer: Cpyrus
Question: What is the right side of a boat called?
Answer: Starboard
Question: What often used computer term is short for picture element?
Answer: Pixel
Question: What word is used for the letter 'O' in the phonetic alphabet?
Answer: Oscar
Question: There are only 4 gemstones that can be called precious - the rest are semi-precious - what are the 4?
Answer: Diamond, Emerald, Ruby and Sapphire.
Question: What is considered to be the world's fastest growing plant?
Answer: Bamboo
Question: What name is given to plants that last for many years?
Answer: Perennials
Question: What type of creature is a speckled wood?
Answer: Butterfly
Question: What do we call the electromagnetic waves between radio waves & infrared, they are actually higher frequencies of radio waves?
Answer: microwaves
Question: What are the three largest planets in the solar system?
Answer: Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus
Question: In a 4-stroke internal combustion engine, what is the third stroke?
Answer: The ignition or power stroke (Intake, compression, IGNITION and exhaust)
Question: What name is given to a female swan?
Answer: Pen
Question: What is the most abundant metal in the Earth's crust?
Answer: Aluminium
Answer: Lactic Acid
Question: Which short-legged dog is named after the 18 Century parson who bred them?
Answer: Jack Russel
Question: What is the light sensitive part of the eye called?
Answer: The retina
Question: When did New Year’s Eve & New Year’s Day last fall in the same year?
Answer: It happens every year!
Question: What is the outer layer of skin called?
Answer: Epidermis
Question: Is an icicle a stalagmite or a stalactite?
Answer: Satactite
Question: Which unattractive sounding fruit is a cross between a grapefruit and a tangerine?
Answer: The Ugli fruit
Question: Copper gets its name from which Mediterranean island?
Answer: Cpyrus
Question: What is the right side of a boat called?
Answer: Starboard
Question: What often used computer term is short for picture element?
Answer: Pixel
Question: What word is used for the letter 'O' in the phonetic alphabet?
Answer: Oscar
Question: There are only 4 gemstones that can be called precious - the rest are semi-precious - what are the 4?
Answer: Diamond, Emerald, Ruby and Sapphire.
Question: What is considered to be the world's fastest growing plant?
Answer: Bamboo
Question: What name is given to plants that last for many years?
Answer: Perennials
Question: What type of creature is a speckled wood?
Answer: Butterfly
Question: What do we call the electromagnetic waves between radio waves & infrared, they are actually higher frequencies of radio waves?
Answer: microwaves
Question: What are the three largest planets in the solar system?
Answer: Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus
Question: In a 4-stroke internal combustion engine, what is the third stroke?
Answer: The ignition or power stroke (Intake, compression, IGNITION and exhaust)
Question: What name is given to a female swan?
Answer: Pen
Question: What is the most abundant metal in the Earth's crust?
Answer: Aluminium
SCIENCE QUIZ 21
Question: In a modern 3 pin electrical plug, what is the colour of the live or positive wire?
Answer: Brown
Question: By what name is the flower truss of the Hazel and Willow tress known?
Answer: Catkin
Question: Macaroni, Gentoo, Chinstrap and Emperor are types of what?
Answer: Penguins
Question: What disease is the BCG vaccine used to combat?
Answer: Tubercolosis
Question: What type of plant does the Boll Weevil attack & destroy?
Answer: The cotton plant
Question: Graphite is composed of which element?
Answer: Carbon
Question: What type of fish is a skipjack?
Answer: A fish
Question: What is an eagles nest called?
Answer: An Eyrie
Question: Lacking of which vitamin causes rickets?
Answer: D
Question: Where in your body is the Metatarsal arch?
Answer: The foot
Question: What is a group of owls called?
Answer: A parliament
Question: What is a tine?
Answer: The prong of a fork or a deer's antler.
Question: Which spice comes from the Crocus?
Answer: Saffron
Question: What colour flag is flown at Beaches deemed clean and pollution free?
Answer: Blue
Question: What is H2SO4 the chemical formula for?
Answer: Sulphuric Acid
Question: What is the world’s longest man made waterway – 1600km
Answer: The Grand Canal in China
Question: Humans have 7 vertebrae in the neck, how many does a giraffe have?
Answer: 7
Question: Which part of the body is affected by gingivitis?
Answer: The gums
Question: What was the name of the space shuttle that exploded after lift off in 1986?
Answer: Challenger
Question: What did the British inventor Sir Christopher Cockerell invent & develop?
Answer: The hovercraft
Answer: Brown
Question: By what name is the flower truss of the Hazel and Willow tress known?
Answer: Catkin
Question: Macaroni, Gentoo, Chinstrap and Emperor are types of what?
Answer: Penguins
Question: What disease is the BCG vaccine used to combat?
Answer: Tubercolosis
Question: What type of plant does the Boll Weevil attack & destroy?
Answer: The cotton plant
Question: Graphite is composed of which element?
Answer: Carbon
Question: What type of fish is a skipjack?
Answer: A fish
Question: What is an eagles nest called?
Answer: An Eyrie
Question: Lacking of which vitamin causes rickets?
Answer: D
Question: Where in your body is the Metatarsal arch?
Answer: The foot
Question: What is a group of owls called?
Answer: A parliament
Question: What is a tine?
Answer: The prong of a fork or a deer's antler.
Question: Which spice comes from the Crocus?
Answer: Saffron
Question: What colour flag is flown at Beaches deemed clean and pollution free?
Answer: Blue
Question: What is H2SO4 the chemical formula for?
Answer: Sulphuric Acid
Question: What is the world’s longest man made waterway – 1600km
Answer: The Grand Canal in China
Question: Humans have 7 vertebrae in the neck, how many does a giraffe have?
Answer: 7
Question: Which part of the body is affected by gingivitis?
Answer: The gums
Question: What was the name of the space shuttle that exploded after lift off in 1986?
Answer: Challenger
Question: What did the British inventor Sir Christopher Cockerell invent & develop?
Answer: The hovercraft
SCIENCE QUIZ 20
Question: How many cubic feet in a cubic yard?
Answer: 27
Question: What colour are albino animal's eyes?
Answer: Pink
Question: Which unit of area is equal to 2.471 acres?
Answer: A hectare
Question: What is the term for the main body of an aeroplane?
Answer: Fuselage
Question: Which animal is supposedly named after the aborigine for 'I don't know'?
Answer: Kangaroo
Question: What may be mixed, complex or vulgar?
Answer: Fractions
Question: Brent, Canada and Pink footed are all types of which creature?
Answer: Geese
Question: The locks on the Panama canal were designed so that which ship could steam through them?
Answer: The Titanic
Question: What's the odd one out? Cheetah, hyena, leopard, panther?
Answer: Hyena - it's a Dog
Question: What sort of creature is a Clydesdale?
Answer: Horse (Shire)
Question: How many sides has a tetrahedron?
Answer: 4
Question: Express 91 in Roman numerals.
Answer: XCI
Question: Which British duo were the first people to fly across the Atlantic Ocean non-stop?
Answer: British aviators John William Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown. They flew from St John’s, Newfoundland, to Clifden, Ireland, on June 14-15, 1919, in a little over 16 hours, to win a substantial prize offered by the London Daily Mail.
Question: What is a young pilchard called?
Answer: A sardine
Question: What is the difference between a black leopard and a panther?
Answer: Nothing. A black leopard IS a panther.
Question: What unit is used to measure the frequency of radio waves?
Answer: Hertz
Question: Who first conceived the helicopter, which at the time was called an ornithopter because it was designed to simulate birds in flight?
Answer: Leonardo Da Vinci
Question: What is the square root of 169?
Answer: 13
Question: What is the scientific name for the wind pipe?
Answer: The Trachea
Question: How many square inches are there in a square foot?
Answer: 144
Answer: 27
Question: What colour are albino animal's eyes?
Answer: Pink
Question: Which unit of area is equal to 2.471 acres?
Answer: A hectare
Question: What is the term for the main body of an aeroplane?
Answer: Fuselage
Question: Which animal is supposedly named after the aborigine for 'I don't know'?
Answer: Kangaroo
Question: What may be mixed, complex or vulgar?
Answer: Fractions
Question: Brent, Canada and Pink footed are all types of which creature?
Answer: Geese
Question: The locks on the Panama canal were designed so that which ship could steam through them?
Answer: The Titanic
Question: What's the odd one out? Cheetah, hyena, leopard, panther?
Answer: Hyena - it's a Dog
Question: What sort of creature is a Clydesdale?
Answer: Horse (Shire)
Question: How many sides has a tetrahedron?
Answer: 4
Question: Express 91 in Roman numerals.
Answer: XCI
Question: Which British duo were the first people to fly across the Atlantic Ocean non-stop?
Answer: British aviators John William Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown. They flew from St John’s, Newfoundland, to Clifden, Ireland, on June 14-15, 1919, in a little over 16 hours, to win a substantial prize offered by the London Daily Mail.
Question: What is a young pilchard called?
Answer: A sardine
Question: What is the difference between a black leopard and a panther?
Answer: Nothing. A black leopard IS a panther.
Question: What unit is used to measure the frequency of radio waves?
Answer: Hertz
Question: Who first conceived the helicopter, which at the time was called an ornithopter because it was designed to simulate birds in flight?
Answer: Leonardo Da Vinci
Question: What is the square root of 169?
Answer: 13
Question: What is the scientific name for the wind pipe?
Answer: The Trachea
Question: How many square inches are there in a square foot?
Answer: 144
SCIENCE QUIZ 19
Question: What is the name of the structure along the base of a ship?
Answer: Keel
Question: What kind of acid is found in car batteries?
Answer: Sulphuric Acid
Question: In food, what does the Scoville Scale measure?
Answer: The heat of chillies
Question: Which cotton fabric gets its name from the Iraqi city of Mosul?
Answer: Muslin
Question: What does barley become when prepared for brewing?
Answer: Malt
Question: What does the ‘MP’ stand for in MP3 Player?
Answer: Moving Pictures
Question: If a liquid had a ph of 6 - would it be Acid, Alkali or Neutral?
Answer: Acid
Question: How is the Aurora Australis better known?
Answer: The southern lights
Question: The viral disease AFTOSA is more commonly referred to as what?
Answer: Foot and Mouth
Question: Which English Physicist discovered that white light is made up of many colours of light?
Answer: Issac Newton
Question: Which was the world's first National Park, opening in 1872?
Answer: Yellowstone (in Wyoming and Montana)
Question: If you were a Lepidopterist, what would your hobby be?
Answer: Collecting Butterflies or moths
Question: Which scoring system is based on the number of times a letter appeared on a single front page of the New York Times?
Answer: Scrabble
Question: Which gland is enlarged in the condition known as 'goitre'?
Answer: Thyroid
Question: To which fish family does the Anchovy belong?
Answer: Herring
Question: Alphabetically, which is the second sign of the zodiac?
Answer: Aries
Question: What does the word dinosaur mean?
Answer: Terrible lizard
Question: What is a leveret?
Answer: A young hare
Question: How many dots are there on a pair of dice?
Answer: 42
Question: What two colours are on a semaphore flag?
Answer: Red and yellow
Answer: Keel
Question: What kind of acid is found in car batteries?
Answer: Sulphuric Acid
Question: In food, what does the Scoville Scale measure?
Answer: The heat of chillies
Question: Which cotton fabric gets its name from the Iraqi city of Mosul?
Answer: Muslin
Question: What does barley become when prepared for brewing?
Answer: Malt
Question: What does the ‘MP’ stand for in MP3 Player?
Answer: Moving Pictures
Question: If a liquid had a ph of 6 - would it be Acid, Alkali or Neutral?
Answer: Acid
Question: How is the Aurora Australis better known?
Answer: The southern lights
Question: The viral disease AFTOSA is more commonly referred to as what?
Answer: Foot and Mouth
Question: Which English Physicist discovered that white light is made up of many colours of light?
Answer: Issac Newton
Question: Which was the world's first National Park, opening in 1872?
Answer: Yellowstone (in Wyoming and Montana)
Question: If you were a Lepidopterist, what would your hobby be?
Answer: Collecting Butterflies or moths
Question: Which scoring system is based on the number of times a letter appeared on a single front page of the New York Times?
Answer: Scrabble
Question: Which gland is enlarged in the condition known as 'goitre'?
Answer: Thyroid
Question: To which fish family does the Anchovy belong?
Answer: Herring
Question: Alphabetically, which is the second sign of the zodiac?
Answer: Aries
Question: What does the word dinosaur mean?
Answer: Terrible lizard
Question: What is a leveret?
Answer: A young hare
Question: How many dots are there on a pair of dice?
Answer: 42
Question: What two colours are on a semaphore flag?
Answer: Red and yellow
SCIENCE QUIZ 18
Question: What is a Laxton Superb?
Answer: Apple
Question: Which gas, which he called 'dephlogisticated air', was discovered by Sir Joseph Priestley in 1774?
Answer: Oxygen
Question: What kind of animal is a pipistrelle?
Answer: Bat
Question: What can be Cardinal or Ordinal?
Answer: Numbers - Cardinal = 1,2,3 ordinal = first, second, third
Question: In science what is the opposite of centrifugal force?
Answer: Centripetal
Question: Which device controls an electric current by varying resistance to the current?
Answer: Rheostat
Question: Which metallic element is an essential constituent of haemoglobin?
Answer: Iron. To combine properly with oxygen, the red blood cells must contain adequate haemoglobin; this, in turn, depends on the amount of iron in the body. The organism derives its store of iron by absorption from the gastrointestinal tract.
Question: Which unit of volume is equal to one cubic decimetre?
Answer: Litre
Question: What does a 30-year-old European male have that is on average 2.2 inches long and sticks out 1 inch?
Answer: Nose
Question: By what name is solid carbon dioxide known?
Answer: Dry Ice
Question: What is collective noun for a group of Dolphins?
Answer: A pod
Question: What colourless liquid used as an antiseptic and a bleach has the chemical formula H2O2?
Answer: Hydrogen Peroxide
Question: What are the tiny air sacs in the lungs called?
Answer: Alveoli
Question: What kind of animal is a St Lucia Parrot?
Answer: It's a Parrot, from St Lucia
Question: What name is given to the positive electrode of a battery?
Answer: Anode
Question: What is the epicarp of an orange?
Answer: Peel
Question: Which scientific word relates to the structure of the human body?
Answer: Anatomy
Question: Which ponies were originally used in coalmines?
Answer: Shetland ponies
Question: In computer terminology, what does LAN stand for?
Answer: Local area network
Question: Which is the heaviest snake in the world?
Answer: Anaconda - has been measured up to 500lb / 27ft 9ins length
Answer: Apple
Question: Which gas, which he called 'dephlogisticated air', was discovered by Sir Joseph Priestley in 1774?
Answer: Oxygen
Question: What kind of animal is a pipistrelle?
Answer: Bat
Question: What can be Cardinal or Ordinal?
Answer: Numbers - Cardinal = 1,2,3 ordinal = first, second, third
Question: In science what is the opposite of centrifugal force?
Answer: Centripetal
Question: Which device controls an electric current by varying resistance to the current?
Answer: Rheostat
Question: Which metallic element is an essential constituent of haemoglobin?
Answer: Iron. To combine properly with oxygen, the red blood cells must contain adequate haemoglobin; this, in turn, depends on the amount of iron in the body. The organism derives its store of iron by absorption from the gastrointestinal tract.
Question: Which unit of volume is equal to one cubic decimetre?
Answer: Litre
Question: What does a 30-year-old European male have that is on average 2.2 inches long and sticks out 1 inch?
Answer: Nose
Question: By what name is solid carbon dioxide known?
Answer: Dry Ice
Question: What is collective noun for a group of Dolphins?
Answer: A pod
Question: What colourless liquid used as an antiseptic and a bleach has the chemical formula H2O2?
Answer: Hydrogen Peroxide
Question: What are the tiny air sacs in the lungs called?
Answer: Alveoli
Question: What kind of animal is a St Lucia Parrot?
Answer: It's a Parrot, from St Lucia
Question: What name is given to the positive electrode of a battery?
Answer: Anode
Question: What is the epicarp of an orange?
Answer: Peel
Question: Which scientific word relates to the structure of the human body?
Answer: Anatomy
Question: Which ponies were originally used in coalmines?
Answer: Shetland ponies
Question: In computer terminology, what does LAN stand for?
Answer: Local area network
Question: Which is the heaviest snake in the world?
Answer: Anaconda - has been measured up to 500lb / 27ft 9ins length
SCIENCE QUIZ 17
Question: From where do Shetland ponies originate?
Answer: The Shetland Islands (also Scandinavia 10,000 years ago across ice fields)
Question: From which animal do we get Cashmere wool?
Answer: Goat
Question: Other than humans, what are the only creatures that mate for pleasure?
Answer: Dolphins
Question: What is the most common blood type in humans?
Answer: O
Question: What is an Ishihara test used for?
Answer: To determine whether or not someone is colour blind
Question: What is the third letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Gamma
Question: Who designed the first modern petrol-driven internal combustion engine for the car?
Answer: Gottlieb Daimler
Question: Where in the body would you find the hallux?
Answer: On your foot (it's your big toe)
Question: What type of creature is a taipan?
Answer: Taipan
Question: What is the Chemical Symbol for Copper
Answer: Cu
Question: What is the only sign of the zodiac not named after a living creature, and what is it named after?
Answer: Libra - named after the scales
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of monkeys?
Answer: A troop
Question: Yperite, first used by the German army in September 1917, is better known as what type of gas?
Answer: Mustard Gas
Question: In which part of the body are the alveolar sacs?
Answer: Lungs
Question: How are angles measured, other than Degrees?
Answer: Radian
Question: Which insect is accredited as being responsible for transmitting the Plague in the Middle Ages?
Answer: Flea
Question: The 1st Re-usable space craft was called Columbia, what is it more commonly called?
Answer: Space Shuttle
Question: What is kept in an apiary?
Answer: Bees
Question: Which Food do Humans eat Most of?
Answer: Rice
Question: Exercises designed to increase oxygen consumption and speed blood circulation are called what?
Answer: Aerobics
Answer: The Shetland Islands (also Scandinavia 10,000 years ago across ice fields)
Question: From which animal do we get Cashmere wool?
Answer: Goat
Question: Other than humans, what are the only creatures that mate for pleasure?
Answer: Dolphins
Question: What is the most common blood type in humans?
Answer: O
Question: What is an Ishihara test used for?
Answer: To determine whether or not someone is colour blind
Question: What is the third letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Gamma
Question: Who designed the first modern petrol-driven internal combustion engine for the car?
Answer: Gottlieb Daimler
Question: Where in the body would you find the hallux?
Answer: On your foot (it's your big toe)
Question: What type of creature is a taipan?
Answer: Taipan
Question: What is the Chemical Symbol for Copper
Answer: Cu
Question: What is the only sign of the zodiac not named after a living creature, and what is it named after?
Answer: Libra - named after the scales
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of monkeys?
Answer: A troop
Question: Yperite, first used by the German army in September 1917, is better known as what type of gas?
Answer: Mustard Gas
Question: In which part of the body are the alveolar sacs?
Answer: Lungs
Question: How are angles measured, other than Degrees?
Answer: Radian
Question: Which insect is accredited as being responsible for transmitting the Plague in the Middle Ages?
Answer: Flea
Question: The 1st Re-usable space craft was called Columbia, what is it more commonly called?
Answer: Space Shuttle
Question: What is kept in an apiary?
Answer: Bees
Question: Which Food do Humans eat Most of?
Answer: Rice
Question: Exercises designed to increase oxygen consumption and speed blood circulation are called what?
Answer: Aerobics
SCIENCE QUIZ 16
Question: What did Hyman Lipman do in 1958 that made life easier for students?
Answer: Put a rubber on the end of a pencil.
Question: How hot is the (tungsten) filament in a normal (incandescent) electric light bulb?
Answer: 3000 centigrade or 5400 Fahrenheit. Tungsten melts at about 3410° C (6170° F) and boils at about 5660° C (10,220° F)
Question: What day is the middle day of the year in non leap years?
Answer: July 2
Question: In degrees centigrade, what is the normal body temperature of humans?
Answer: 37. (98.6 Fahrenheit)
Question: What famous building did John Nash rebuild in 1825?
Answer: Buckingham Palace
Question: What is the tallest and thickest type of grass?
Answer: Bamboo
Question: Why was Louise Brown famous in 1978?
Answer: She was the first test-tube baby
Question: If you divide 30 by 1/2 and add 10. What is the answer?
Answer: 70 - 30 divided by 1/2 is the same as 30 x 2, or 60, plus 10, making 70.
Question: What is the worlds tallest growing Grass?
Answer: Bamboo
Question: What is the computer term Bit short for?
Answer: Binary Digit
Question: What was the 1st Plastic ever made?
Answer: Bakerlite
Question: Long haul air travellers are in danger of developing which condition commonly known as DVT?
Answer: Deep vein thrombosis
Question: How many pairs of chromosomes do humans have?
Answer: 23
Question: What colour Traffic Light follows amber?
Answer: Red
Question: What sort of creature is a Falabella?
Answer: Horse
Question: What is the oldest living plant species?
Answer: Fern
Question: In which Country is the World's largest Pyramid?
Answer: Peru.The largest pyramid is the Huaca del Sol, built by the Moche, in the Moche Valley, Northern Peru.
Question: What name is given to an elephant's incisor tooth?
Answer: Tusk
Question: Which Cosmonaut was called the 'Columbus of the Cosmos'?
Answer: Yuri Gagarin
Question: In computer terminology how many bytes in a kilobyte?
Answer: 1024
Answer: Put a rubber on the end of a pencil.
Question: How hot is the (tungsten) filament in a normal (incandescent) electric light bulb?
Answer: 3000 centigrade or 5400 Fahrenheit. Tungsten melts at about 3410° C (6170° F) and boils at about 5660° C (10,220° F)
Question: What day is the middle day of the year in non leap years?
Answer: July 2
Question: In degrees centigrade, what is the normal body temperature of humans?
Answer: 37. (98.6 Fahrenheit)
Question: What famous building did John Nash rebuild in 1825?
Answer: Buckingham Palace
Question: What is the tallest and thickest type of grass?
Answer: Bamboo
Question: Why was Louise Brown famous in 1978?
Answer: She was the first test-tube baby
Question: If you divide 30 by 1/2 and add 10. What is the answer?
Answer: 70 - 30 divided by 1/2 is the same as 30 x 2, or 60, plus 10, making 70.
Question: What is the worlds tallest growing Grass?
Answer: Bamboo
Question: What is the computer term Bit short for?
Answer: Binary Digit
Question: What was the 1st Plastic ever made?
Answer: Bakerlite
Question: Long haul air travellers are in danger of developing which condition commonly known as DVT?
Answer: Deep vein thrombosis
Question: How many pairs of chromosomes do humans have?
Answer: 23
Question: What colour Traffic Light follows amber?
Answer: Red
Question: What sort of creature is a Falabella?
Answer: Horse
Question: What is the oldest living plant species?
Answer: Fern
Question: In which Country is the World's largest Pyramid?
Answer: Peru.The largest pyramid is the Huaca del Sol, built by the Moche, in the Moche Valley, Northern Peru.
Question: What name is given to an elephant's incisor tooth?
Answer: Tusk
Question: Which Cosmonaut was called the 'Columbus of the Cosmos'?
Answer: Yuri Gagarin
Question: In computer terminology how many bytes in a kilobyte?
Answer: 1024
SCIENCE QUIZ 15
Question: Which is the fourth-nearest planet to the sun?
Answer: Mars
Question: In Geometry which term is applied to 2 triangles having both the same shape and size?
Answer: Congruent triangles
Question: What gas poisons you when you commit suicide by breathing car exhaust fumes?
Answer: Carbon Monoxide
Question: What fruit is also known as a Chinese Gooseberry?
Answer: Kiwi fruit
Question: What is the name of the large diamond found in the Queen's Sceptre?
Answer: (Great) Star of Africa or Cullinan 1
Question: Which bone in the human body is most frequently broken?
Answer: Collar bone
Question: In which city did the Queen officially launch The Queen Mary II?
Answer: Southampton
Question: Which country was the first to use rockets in warfare?
Answer: China
Question: What form of hunting is regulated by the I.W.C.?
Answer: Whaling
Question: What did Martin Stone invent in 1888 that millions of suckers use every day?
Answer: Drinking Straw
Question: What sort of creature is a Chester White?
Answer: Pig
Question: In which organ of the body is the Aqueous Humour found?
Answer: The eye
Question: What 2 dances are used in the radio communications alphabet that starts Alpha, Beta, Charlie?
Answer: Tango and Foxtrot
Question: What is the unchanging position in which forces cancel each other out?
Answer: Equilibrium
Question: What do you call a group of squirrels?
Answer: A dray
Question: What kind of animal named 'Ham' did the U.S. first send into space?
Answer: Chimpanzee
Question: Where are the pyramids of Malpighi and the pyramids of Ferrein?
Answer: In the kidneys
Question: What percentage of the earths land surface has a temperate climate?
Answer: 7%
Question: What is a high altitude treeless region subject to permafrost known as?
Answer: Tundra
Question: What percentage of whole milk is water?
Answer: 87
Answer: Mars
Question: In Geometry which term is applied to 2 triangles having both the same shape and size?
Answer: Congruent triangles
Question: What gas poisons you when you commit suicide by breathing car exhaust fumes?
Answer: Carbon Monoxide
Question: What fruit is also known as a Chinese Gooseberry?
Answer: Kiwi fruit
Question: What is the name of the large diamond found in the Queen's Sceptre?
Answer: (Great) Star of Africa or Cullinan 1
Question: Which bone in the human body is most frequently broken?
Answer: Collar bone
Question: In which city did the Queen officially launch The Queen Mary II?
Answer: Southampton
Question: Which country was the first to use rockets in warfare?
Answer: China
Question: What form of hunting is regulated by the I.W.C.?
Answer: Whaling
Question: What did Martin Stone invent in 1888 that millions of suckers use every day?
Answer: Drinking Straw
Question: What sort of creature is a Chester White?
Answer: Pig
Question: In which organ of the body is the Aqueous Humour found?
Answer: The eye
Question: What 2 dances are used in the radio communications alphabet that starts Alpha, Beta, Charlie?
Answer: Tango and Foxtrot
Question: What is the unchanging position in which forces cancel each other out?
Answer: Equilibrium
Question: What do you call a group of squirrels?
Answer: A dray
Question: What kind of animal named 'Ham' did the U.S. first send into space?
Answer: Chimpanzee
Question: Where are the pyramids of Malpighi and the pyramids of Ferrein?
Answer: In the kidneys
Question: What percentage of the earths land surface has a temperate climate?
Answer: 7%
Question: What is a high altitude treeless region subject to permafrost known as?
Answer: Tundra
Question: What percentage of whole milk is water?
Answer: 87
SCIENCE QUIZ 14
Question: What is a gross minus a score?
Answer: 124
Question: Neon , Argon and Helium, are examples of what group of Gases?
Answer: (Noble (Inert) gases) krypton, xenon, and radon are the other 3.
Question: Hydrolysis is the reaction of a chemical compound with which liquid?
Answer: Water
Question: In wine making, what is the 'must'?
Answer: The juice from the grapes before it’s fermented.
Question: There are 6 fields of endeavour for which Nobel prizes are awarded. Name 3 of them.
Answer: Physics, chemistry, medicine or physiology, literature, peace and economic science
Question: What type of acid is extracted from the juice of lemons, oranges, limes, and grapefruit?
Answer: Citric Acid
Question: What are the names given to the pits in the skin from which hairs grow out of?
Answer: Follicles
Question: How old is a quadragenarian?
Answer: 40
Question: What is graphology the study of?
Answer: Handwriting
Question: What is the Latin name for the constellation that is commonly known as the Great Bear?
Answer: Ursa Major
Question: What are the substances in the saliva of vampire bats, leeches and mosquitos that prevents clotting?
Answer: Anti-coagulants
Question: If you weigh 154 pounds in America, how many stones is that in England?
Answer: 11
Question: What metal reacts to acetic acid by forming verdigris?
Answer: Copper
Question: What 2 words were combined to form the word contrail - the visible cloudlike streak left behind by jet aircraft?
Answer: Condensation and trail.
Question: Where in the body would you find the cochlea and the stirrup?
Answer: Ear
Question: What part of the banana is used to make banana oil?
Answer: None, banana oil is a synthetic compound.
Question: What does the ringing of 8 bells mean on board a ship?
Answer: End of the watch.
Question: What is a diadromous fish?
Answer: One that can exist in both fresh and salt water.
Question: Who invented the ball-point pen?
Answer: Laszlo and George Biro.
Question: Which mammal has the largest eyes in proportion to its overall size?
Answer: The domestic cat
Answer: 124
Question: Neon , Argon and Helium, are examples of what group of Gases?
Answer: (Noble (Inert) gases) krypton, xenon, and radon are the other 3.
Question: Hydrolysis is the reaction of a chemical compound with which liquid?
Answer: Water
Question: In wine making, what is the 'must'?
Answer: The juice from the grapes before it’s fermented.
Question: There are 6 fields of endeavour for which Nobel prizes are awarded. Name 3 of them.
Answer: Physics, chemistry, medicine or physiology, literature, peace and economic science
Question: What type of acid is extracted from the juice of lemons, oranges, limes, and grapefruit?
Answer: Citric Acid
Question: What are the names given to the pits in the skin from which hairs grow out of?
Answer: Follicles
Question: How old is a quadragenarian?
Answer: 40
Question: What is graphology the study of?
Answer: Handwriting
Question: What is the Latin name for the constellation that is commonly known as the Great Bear?
Answer: Ursa Major
Question: What are the substances in the saliva of vampire bats, leeches and mosquitos that prevents clotting?
Answer: Anti-coagulants
Question: If you weigh 154 pounds in America, how many stones is that in England?
Answer: 11
Question: What metal reacts to acetic acid by forming verdigris?
Answer: Copper
Question: What 2 words were combined to form the word contrail - the visible cloudlike streak left behind by jet aircraft?
Answer: Condensation and trail.
Question: Where in the body would you find the cochlea and the stirrup?
Answer: Ear
Question: What part of the banana is used to make banana oil?
Answer: None, banana oil is a synthetic compound.
Question: What does the ringing of 8 bells mean on board a ship?
Answer: End of the watch.
Question: What is a diadromous fish?
Answer: One that can exist in both fresh and salt water.
Question: Who invented the ball-point pen?
Answer: Laszlo and George Biro.
Question: Which mammal has the largest eyes in proportion to its overall size?
Answer: The domestic cat
SCIENCE QUIZ 13
Question: What is the more common name for Ethylene Glycol?
Answer: Antifreeze.
Question: What continent have the oldest fossils been found on?
Answer: Africa
Question: What is the only member of the cat family that does not have retractable claws?
Answer: Cheetah
Question: What is the second lightest chemical element?
Answer: Helium
Question: How many teeth are usually found in a set of temporary or 'baby' human teeth?
Answer: 20
Question: Out of all the animals that make up the Chinese horoscope, which comes first alphabetically?
Answer: Dog
Question: Hermit, spider and blue are all types of which creature?
Answer: Crab
Question: The binary system of numbers uses which two numerical digits?
Answer: 0 and 1
Question: What are the main four blood groups?
Answer: A, B, AB and O
Question: What family are elephants, rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses all members of?
Answer: Pachyderm
Question: Which synthetic material was named by combining the French words for velvet and hook?
Answer: Velcro
Question: In Jules Verne's "from Earth to the Moon" 3 men are blasted to the moon by cannon. Their speed of departure has proven to be the earth's escape velocity. What is it?
Answer: 7 miles per second.
Question: What does “C” represent in the equation E = MC squared?
Answer: The speed of light
Question: How many astronauts walked on the moon during each Apollo moon-landing?
Answer: 2
Question: A treatment of rubber which strengthens it and gives it greater elasticity is named after the roman god of fire. What is this process called?
Answer: Vulcanisation
Question: What is a female peacock called?
Answer: Peahen
Question: Which animals name literally means 'earth pig'?
Answer: Aardvark
Question: What is a cross between a Female Horse and a Male Ass called?
Answer: A mule.
Question: From which plant do we obtain Linseed Oil?
Answer: Flax
Question: Why is the Funny bone so called?
Answer: Because it's the Humerous
Answer: Antifreeze.
Question: What continent have the oldest fossils been found on?
Answer: Africa
Question: What is the only member of the cat family that does not have retractable claws?
Answer: Cheetah
Question: What is the second lightest chemical element?
Answer: Helium
Question: How many teeth are usually found in a set of temporary or 'baby' human teeth?
Answer: 20
Question: Out of all the animals that make up the Chinese horoscope, which comes first alphabetically?
Answer: Dog
Question: Hermit, spider and blue are all types of which creature?
Answer: Crab
Question: The binary system of numbers uses which two numerical digits?
Answer: 0 and 1
Question: What are the main four blood groups?
Answer: A, B, AB and O
Question: What family are elephants, rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses all members of?
Answer: Pachyderm
Question: Which synthetic material was named by combining the French words for velvet and hook?
Answer: Velcro
Question: In Jules Verne's "from Earth to the Moon" 3 men are blasted to the moon by cannon. Their speed of departure has proven to be the earth's escape velocity. What is it?
Answer: 7 miles per second.
Question: What does “C” represent in the equation E = MC squared?
Answer: The speed of light
Question: How many astronauts walked on the moon during each Apollo moon-landing?
Answer: 2
Question: A treatment of rubber which strengthens it and gives it greater elasticity is named after the roman god of fire. What is this process called?
Answer: Vulcanisation
Question: What is a female peacock called?
Answer: Peahen
Question: Which animals name literally means 'earth pig'?
Answer: Aardvark
Question: What is a cross between a Female Horse and a Male Ass called?
Answer: A mule.
Question: From which plant do we obtain Linseed Oil?
Answer: Flax
Question: Why is the Funny bone so called?
Answer: Because it's the Humerous
SCIENCE QUIZ 12
Question: What are the two types of camel called?
Answer: Dromedary and Bactrian.
Question: What is a 'Black Molly'?
Answer: A (tropical) fish.
Question: What's the largest, and most powerful of the American cats?
Answer: Jaguar
Question: Where would you find the 'Whispering Gallery'?
Answer: St. Paul's Cathedral
Question: Savoy is a variety of which vegetable?
Answer: Cabbage
Question: What is the Star of India?
Answer: World’s largest sapphire
Question: What is the name of the green rust that grows on copper?
Answer: Verdegris
Question: Where might you expect to see a 'Gatso' camera?
Answer: By the side of the road - they are speed cameras!
Question: Which of the Apollo space missions was the first to land on the moon?
Answer: Appollo 11
Question: In mobile phone technology, what does S.M.S. stand for?
Answer: Short Messaging Service
Question: Red, fennec, Arctic and bat-eared are all species of which animal?
Answer: Fox
Question: What is the square root of one quarter?
Answer: One Half
Question: What is the collective name for a group of Camels?
Answer: Train
Question: What's another name for a Cougar or Mountain lion?
Answer: Puma
Question: According to physicists, what is the fastest moving thing in the universe?
Answer: The electron
Question: What is a Female Donkey Called?
Answer: A jenny
Question: Where in the body would you find the labyrinth?
Answer: In the ear
Question: In Mammals, the Asian Elephant has the second longest, but man has the longest – what?
Answer: Life span
Question: What's a cat that's coloured black, orange and cream called?
Answer: Tortoise shell
Question: How many active volcanoes are there on Earth?
Answer: About 600
Answer: Dromedary and Bactrian.
Question: What is a 'Black Molly'?
Answer: A (tropical) fish.
Question: What's the largest, and most powerful of the American cats?
Answer: Jaguar
Question: Where would you find the 'Whispering Gallery'?
Answer: St. Paul's Cathedral
Question: Savoy is a variety of which vegetable?
Answer: Cabbage
Question: What is the Star of India?
Answer: World’s largest sapphire
Question: What is the name of the green rust that grows on copper?
Answer: Verdegris
Question: Where might you expect to see a 'Gatso' camera?
Answer: By the side of the road - they are speed cameras!
Question: Which of the Apollo space missions was the first to land on the moon?
Answer: Appollo 11
Question: In mobile phone technology, what does S.M.S. stand for?
Answer: Short Messaging Service
Question: Red, fennec, Arctic and bat-eared are all species of which animal?
Answer: Fox
Question: What is the square root of one quarter?
Answer: One Half
Question: What is the collective name for a group of Camels?
Answer: Train
Question: What's another name for a Cougar or Mountain lion?
Answer: Puma
Question: According to physicists, what is the fastest moving thing in the universe?
Answer: The electron
Question: What is a Female Donkey Called?
Answer: A jenny
Question: Where in the body would you find the labyrinth?
Answer: In the ear
Question: In Mammals, the Asian Elephant has the second longest, but man has the longest – what?
Answer: Life span
Question: What's a cat that's coloured black, orange and cream called?
Answer: Tortoise shell
Question: How many active volcanoes are there on Earth?
Answer: About 600
SCIENCE QUIZ 11
Question: Which geographical location was the first word spoken on the moon?
Answer: Houston
Question: What are the three primary colours of light?
Answer: Red Blue Green
Question: What is the name given to the system for categorising library books?
Answer: Dewey Decimal System
Question: What is the smallest cell in the human body?
Answer: The male sperm. It takes about 175,000 sperm cells to weigh as much as a single egg cell.
Question: What is the largest cell in the human body?
Answer: The female ovum, or egg cell. It is about 1/180 inch in diameter.
Question: Who said... 'Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind'?
Answer: Albert Einstein
Question: What is a Capon?
Answer: A castrated rooster.
Question: What is the world's largest herb?
Answer: Banana plant
Question: What does a Sphygmomanometer measure?
Answer: Blood pressure
Question: What colour is Yaks milk?
Answer: Pink
Question: What is a Perfusionist's role in a hospital surgery?
Answer: Running the heart & lung machine
Question: What is the only rock that floats in water?
Answer: Pumice. An igneous (produced by volcanic action) rock having a spongy or frothy texture, and composed largely of glass. It is still sometimes used, as 'pumice stone', to scrape the skin when bathing.
Question: When is Halley's comet expected to appear again?
Answer: 2061
Question: The condition of seasonal allergic rhinitis is better known by what name?
Answer: Hayfever
Question: Which fruit is a cross between the mandarin orange and the bitter orange and is named after a port in Morocco?
Answer: Tangerine
Question: When was power steering first available in a petrol driven car?
Answer: It was in the USA in 1951.
Question: In Australia, in which month of the year is the longest day?
Answer: December
Question: Which two months are covered by the star sign Gemini?
Answer: May
Question: What single letter is the chemical symbol for the element Tungsten?
Answer: W
Question: Which fruit has the scientific name of malus pumulia?
Answer: Apple
Answer: Houston
Question: What are the three primary colours of light?
Answer: Red Blue Green
Question: What is the name given to the system for categorising library books?
Answer: Dewey Decimal System
Question: What is the smallest cell in the human body?
Answer: The male sperm. It takes about 175,000 sperm cells to weigh as much as a single egg cell.
Question: What is the largest cell in the human body?
Answer: The female ovum, or egg cell. It is about 1/180 inch in diameter.
Question: Who said... 'Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind'?
Answer: Albert Einstein
Question: What is a Capon?
Answer: A castrated rooster.
Question: What is the world's largest herb?
Answer: Banana plant
Question: What does a Sphygmomanometer measure?
Answer: Blood pressure
Question: What colour is Yaks milk?
Answer: Pink
Question: What is a Perfusionist's role in a hospital surgery?
Answer: Running the heart & lung machine
Question: What is the only rock that floats in water?
Answer: Pumice. An igneous (produced by volcanic action) rock having a spongy or frothy texture, and composed largely of glass. It is still sometimes used, as 'pumice stone', to scrape the skin when bathing.
Question: When is Halley's comet expected to appear again?
Answer: 2061
Question: The condition of seasonal allergic rhinitis is better known by what name?
Answer: Hayfever
Question: Which fruit is a cross between the mandarin orange and the bitter orange and is named after a port in Morocco?
Answer: Tangerine
Question: When was power steering first available in a petrol driven car?
Answer: It was in the USA in 1951.
Question: In Australia, in which month of the year is the longest day?
Answer: December
Question: Which two months are covered by the star sign Gemini?
Answer: May
Question: What single letter is the chemical symbol for the element Tungsten?
Answer: W
Question: Which fruit has the scientific name of malus pumulia?
Answer: Apple
SCIENCE QUIZ 10
Question: What, in the human body is the more common name for the sternum?
Answer: The breastbone
Question: What type of domestic cat has no tail?
Answer: Manx
Question: What is the name of the space station first launched by the Soviet Union in 1986?
Answer: MIR
Question: What is the common name for nitrous oxide?
Answer: Laughing Gas
Question: What is the last letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Omega
Question: Tactile relates to which of the senses?
Answer: Touch
Question: Where in the human body is the thyroid gland?
Answer: Neck
Question: What is Nitrogen narcosis or decompression sickness more commonly known as?
Answer: The Bends; suffered by divers due to pressure change when surfacing too quickly.
Question: The word 'ursine' relates to which animals?
Answer: Bears
Question: What is the only part of the human body which has no blood supply?
Answer: The cornea (in the eye)
Question: What is the name of the chief male sex hormone?
Answer: Testosterone
Question: What would impure dilute acetic acid be better known as?
Answer: Vinegar
Question: What is the chemical term for chalk?
Answer: Calcium carbonate
Question: What is the world’s largest fruit?
Answer: The double coconut or Coco de mere weighs up to 23 kg and only grows in the Seychelles.
Question: What is a more common term for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation?
Answer: Laser
Question: What is a perfect diamond of 100 carats or more called?
Answer: A paragon
Question: In the human body, what is the patella better known as?
Answer: The kneecap
Question: What is a scut?
Answer: A rabbit's tail
Question: Copper gets its name from which Mediterranean island?
Answer: Cyprus - where it was first found
Question: What does the abbreviation UHT stand for? (with regard to milk).
Answer: Ultra Heat Treated
Answer: The breastbone
Question: What type of domestic cat has no tail?
Answer: Manx
Question: What is the name of the space station first launched by the Soviet Union in 1986?
Answer: MIR
Question: What is the common name for nitrous oxide?
Answer: Laughing Gas
Question: What is the last letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Omega
Question: Tactile relates to which of the senses?
Answer: Touch
Question: Where in the human body is the thyroid gland?
Answer: Neck
Question: What is Nitrogen narcosis or decompression sickness more commonly known as?
Answer: The Bends; suffered by divers due to pressure change when surfacing too quickly.
Question: The word 'ursine' relates to which animals?
Answer: Bears
Question: What is the only part of the human body which has no blood supply?
Answer: The cornea (in the eye)
Question: What is the name of the chief male sex hormone?
Answer: Testosterone
Question: What would impure dilute acetic acid be better known as?
Answer: Vinegar
Question: What is the chemical term for chalk?
Answer: Calcium carbonate
Question: What is the world’s largest fruit?
Answer: The double coconut or Coco de mere weighs up to 23 kg and only grows in the Seychelles.
Question: What is a more common term for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation?
Answer: Laser
Question: What is a perfect diamond of 100 carats or more called?
Answer: A paragon
Question: In the human body, what is the patella better known as?
Answer: The kneecap
Question: What is a scut?
Answer: A rabbit's tail
Question: Copper gets its name from which Mediterranean island?
Answer: Cyprus - where it was first found
Question: What does the abbreviation UHT stand for? (with regard to milk).
Answer: Ultra Heat Treated
SCIENCE QUIZ 9
Question: What do Gorilla's do when they get nervous?
Answer: Beat their chests
Question: If a clock seen in a mirror is read as 2.40 what time is it?
Answer: 9:20
Question: What name is given to the car suspended from an airship?
Answer: A Gondola
Question: In which building is the Kohinoor Diamond kept?
Answer: The Tower of London
Question: JVC launched VHS format in 1976, but what does VHS stand for?
Answer: Video Home system
Question: What is the Fahrenheit boiling point of water at sea level?
Answer: 212 degrees
Question: What is the ninth letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Iota
Question: What is the lightest metal?
Answer: Lithium
Question: Who invented the revolver (handgun)?
Answer: Samuel Colt
Question: What is the collective name for a group of peacocks?
Answer: A muster
Question: How many bones are in the human skull? (To within 3 either way.)
Answer: 28
Question: What Age followed the Bronze Age?
Answer: Iron Age
Question: What type of animal is a Caribou?
Answer: Reindeer
Question: What is a camel with one hump called? (It’s not Humphrey).
Answer: Dromedary
Question: What type of plant is a saguaro?
Answer: Cactus
Question: How many hulls does a catamaran have?
Answer: 2
Question: How many carats is pure gold?
Answer: 24
Question: Which animal lives in a holt?
Answer: Otter
Question: What type of animal is an Ibex?
Answer: A goat
Question: What is the collective term for a group of geese?
Answer: Gaggle
Answer: Beat their chests
Question: If a clock seen in a mirror is read as 2.40 what time is it?
Answer: 9:20
Question: What name is given to the car suspended from an airship?
Answer: A Gondola
Question: In which building is the Kohinoor Diamond kept?
Answer: The Tower of London
Question: JVC launched VHS format in 1976, but what does VHS stand for?
Answer: Video Home system
Question: What is the Fahrenheit boiling point of water at sea level?
Answer: 212 degrees
Question: What is the ninth letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Iota
Question: What is the lightest metal?
Answer: Lithium
Question: Who invented the revolver (handgun)?
Answer: Samuel Colt
Question: What is the collective name for a group of peacocks?
Answer: A muster
Question: How many bones are in the human skull? (To within 3 either way.)
Answer: 28
Question: What Age followed the Bronze Age?
Answer: Iron Age
Question: What type of animal is a Caribou?
Answer: Reindeer
Question: What is a camel with one hump called? (It’s not Humphrey).
Answer: Dromedary
Question: What type of plant is a saguaro?
Answer: Cactus
Question: How many hulls does a catamaran have?
Answer: 2
Question: How many carats is pure gold?
Answer: 24
Question: Which animal lives in a holt?
Answer: Otter
Question: What type of animal is an Ibex?
Answer: A goat
Question: What is the collective term for a group of geese?
Answer: Gaggle
SCIENCE QUIZ 8
Question: Who was the second man to step foot on the surface of the moon?
Answer: Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin
Question: What South American burrowing animal has a body encased in bony plates?
Answer: Armadillo
Question: Which breed of dog, first mentioned in writings around the 2nd century AD, is the tallest of all dog breeds?
Answer: Irish Wolfhound
Question: Which tree is often associated with churchyards and graveyards?
Answer: Yew
Question: What bird is known for laying its eggs in other birds’ nests?
Answer: Cuckoo
Question: What mollusc gives its name to a type of explosive mine?
Answer: Limpet
Question: How dothe snakes known as boas kill their prey?
Answer: Crush or squeeze
Question: How many horns does the Indian Rhinoceros have?
Answer: 1
Question: Which year is represented by the seven Roman numerals listed in descending order?
Answer: 1666
Question: What did Mao Tse-Tung refer to as a paper tiger?
Answer: The atomic bomb
Question: A werewolf can only be killed by what?
Answer: Silver Bullets.
Question: What is the alloy of iron with some added chromium and a small amount of nickel called?
Answer: Stainless Steel
Question: What's the difference between the eyes of flesh-eating animals and those of plant-eating animals?
Answer: Carnivores have eyes the front, herbivores at the side
Question: In the human body what is the more common name for the tympanic membrane?
Answer: Eardrum
Question: What’s the Chemical symbol for Lead?
Answer: Pb
Question: The world’s largest species of goose is named after which country?
Answer: The CANADA Goose
Question: What is another name for tetanus?
Answer: Lockjaw
Question: What is the speed of sound at sea level called?
Answer: Mach 1
Question: What is the medical term for an obstruction of a blood vessel by a clot or air bubble?
Answer: Embolism
Question: Which British animal is brown in Summer and White in Winter?
Answer: Stoat
Answer: Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin
Question: What South American burrowing animal has a body encased in bony plates?
Answer: Armadillo
Question: Which breed of dog, first mentioned in writings around the 2nd century AD, is the tallest of all dog breeds?
Answer: Irish Wolfhound
Question: Which tree is often associated with churchyards and graveyards?
Answer: Yew
Question: What bird is known for laying its eggs in other birds’ nests?
Answer: Cuckoo
Question: What mollusc gives its name to a type of explosive mine?
Answer: Limpet
Question: How dothe snakes known as boas kill their prey?
Answer: Crush or squeeze
Question: How many horns does the Indian Rhinoceros have?
Answer: 1
Question: Which year is represented by the seven Roman numerals listed in descending order?
Answer: 1666
Question: What did Mao Tse-Tung refer to as a paper tiger?
Answer: The atomic bomb
Question: A werewolf can only be killed by what?
Answer: Silver Bullets.
Question: What is the alloy of iron with some added chromium and a small amount of nickel called?
Answer: Stainless Steel
Question: What's the difference between the eyes of flesh-eating animals and those of plant-eating animals?
Answer: Carnivores have eyes the front, herbivores at the side
Question: In the human body what is the more common name for the tympanic membrane?
Answer: Eardrum
Question: What’s the Chemical symbol for Lead?
Answer: Pb
Question: The world’s largest species of goose is named after which country?
Answer: The CANADA Goose
Question: What is another name for tetanus?
Answer: Lockjaw
Question: What is the speed of sound at sea level called?
Answer: Mach 1
Question: What is the medical term for an obstruction of a blood vessel by a clot or air bubble?
Answer: Embolism
Question: Which British animal is brown in Summer and White in Winter?
Answer: Stoat
SCIENCE QUIZ 7
Question: Apart from water, what is the most widely consumed drink in the world, Coffee, Tea or Coca-Cola?
Answer: Tea
Question: True or False a Lettuce is a member of the Daisy Family.
Answer: True
Question: Which metal is added to Gold to make White Gold?
Answer: Silver
Question: How many centimetres make a kilometre?
Answer: 100 000
Question: What's the Chemical symbol for Potassium?
Answer: K
Question: Approximately how many miles/ km of arteries, veins and capillaries are in the average human body?
Answer: 60,000 miles (96,000 km).
Question: Henry was out walking one day. He met his father-in-law's only daughter's mother-in-law. What did Henry call her?
Answer: Mother
Question: What creature provides the symbol for the Aries star sign?
Answer: Ram
Question: Which planet shares its name with a type of carnivorous plant?
Answer: Venus (flytrap)
Question: What stimulant is found in cola nuts?
Answer: Caffeine
Question: What is a male bee called?
Answer: A drone.
Question: What disease might you catch from an anopheline?
Answer: Malaria
Question: What is the national flower of Wales?
Answer: Daffodil
Question: What is the name of the male reproductive organ (of a flower)?
Answer: The stamen
Question: What is a leveret?
Answer: A young hare
Question: What would you use a Dermatherm to measure?
Answer: Skin temperature
Question: Which useful house hold item is made from Naphthalene?
Answer: Moth Balls
Question: What is a gnomon?
Answer: The part of a sundial that casts the shadow?
Question: In 1796 Edward Jenner discovered a vaccination for what?
Answer: Smallpox
Question: By what name is a modulator-demodulator better known?
Answer: Modem
Answer: Tea
Question: True or False a Lettuce is a member of the Daisy Family.
Answer: True
Question: Which metal is added to Gold to make White Gold?
Answer: Silver
Question: How many centimetres make a kilometre?
Answer: 100 000
Question: What's the Chemical symbol for Potassium?
Answer: K
Question: Approximately how many miles/ km of arteries, veins and capillaries are in the average human body?
Answer: 60,000 miles (96,000 km).
Question: Henry was out walking one day. He met his father-in-law's only daughter's mother-in-law. What did Henry call her?
Answer: Mother
Question: What creature provides the symbol for the Aries star sign?
Answer: Ram
Question: Which planet shares its name with a type of carnivorous plant?
Answer: Venus (flytrap)
Question: What stimulant is found in cola nuts?
Answer: Caffeine
Question: What is a male bee called?
Answer: A drone.
Question: What disease might you catch from an anopheline?
Answer: Malaria
Question: What is the national flower of Wales?
Answer: Daffodil
Question: What is the name of the male reproductive organ (of a flower)?
Answer: The stamen
Question: What is a leveret?
Answer: A young hare
Question: What would you use a Dermatherm to measure?
Answer: Skin temperature
Question: Which useful house hold item is made from Naphthalene?
Answer: Moth Balls
Question: What is a gnomon?
Answer: The part of a sundial that casts the shadow?
Question: In 1796 Edward Jenner discovered a vaccination for what?
Answer: Smallpox
Question: By what name is a modulator-demodulator better known?
Answer: Modem
SCIENCE QUIZ 6
Question: Amethyst is a type of which mineral?
Answer: Quartz
Question: What is an eagles nest called?
Answer: An Eyrie
Question: What are the next 3 letters in this riddle? O,T,T,F,F,S,S
Answer: E,N,T (eight nine ten).
Question: What type of monkies (apes) inhabit the Rock of Gibraltar?
Answer: Barbary apes.
Question: In terms of combining Elements into a compound, if you had 2 of number 1 and 1 of number 8 what would you have?
Answer: Water
Question: What commodity is traditionally measured in units called a Truss?
Answer: Hay/Straw
Question: Which animal is the largest member of the cat family?
Answer: Tiger
Question: What colour is calamine lotion?
Answer: Pink
Question: How is Nitrous Oxide better known?
Answer: Laughing Gas.
Question: How many wings does a bee have?
Answer: 4
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of foxes?
Answer: A skulk
Question: What number on the Beaufort scale represents a hurricane?
Answer: 12
Question: What is Frigophobia the fear of?
Answer: Cold
Question: When is your wooden anniversary?
Answer: 5 years.
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of bees?
Answer: A swarm
Question: From what is the artificial fibre Rayon made?
Answer: Wood pulp.
Question: In the phonetic alphabet, what word represents the letter U?
Answer: Uniform.
Question: Bright's disease or Nephritis affects which organs of the body?
Answer: (Inflammation of) the Kidneys.
Question: What is the zodiac sign of the Twins?
Answer: Zodiac
Question: What is the second letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Beta
Answer: Quartz
Question: What is an eagles nest called?
Answer: An Eyrie
Question: What are the next 3 letters in this riddle? O,T,T,F,F,S,S
Answer: E,N,T (eight nine ten).
Question: What type of monkies (apes) inhabit the Rock of Gibraltar?
Answer: Barbary apes.
Question: In terms of combining Elements into a compound, if you had 2 of number 1 and 1 of number 8 what would you have?
Answer: Water
Question: What commodity is traditionally measured in units called a Truss?
Answer: Hay/Straw
Question: Which animal is the largest member of the cat family?
Answer: Tiger
Question: What colour is calamine lotion?
Answer: Pink
Question: How is Nitrous Oxide better known?
Answer: Laughing Gas.
Question: How many wings does a bee have?
Answer: 4
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of foxes?
Answer: A skulk
Question: What number on the Beaufort scale represents a hurricane?
Answer: 12
Question: What is Frigophobia the fear of?
Answer: Cold
Question: When is your wooden anniversary?
Answer: 5 years.
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of bees?
Answer: A swarm
Question: From what is the artificial fibre Rayon made?
Answer: Wood pulp.
Question: In the phonetic alphabet, what word represents the letter U?
Answer: Uniform.
Question: Bright's disease or Nephritis affects which organs of the body?
Answer: (Inflammation of) the Kidneys.
Question: What is the zodiac sign of the Twins?
Answer: Zodiac
Question: What is the second letter of the Greek alphabet?
Answer: Beta
SCIENCE QUIZ 5
Question: The native Indians of South America used a bitter poison to tip their arrows, what was it called?
Answer: Curare
Question: What is the largest fruit crop on earth?
Answer: Grapes, followed by bananas.
Question: What would a galvanometer be used to measure?
Answer: Detecting and measuring small electric currents. (electricity).
Question: If you were an Ungulate what would you have?
Answer: Hoves
Question: Who wrote the 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'?
Answer: Edward Gibbon
Question: Soyuz was the name of a Russian spacecraft, but what does the name mean?
Answer: Union
Question: Who invented Braille?
Answer: Louis Braille in 1829
Question: What is the Fahrenheit equivalent of 20 degrees centigrade?
Answer: 68
Question: What do you call an eight sided figure?
Answer: Octagon
Question: What is the official bird of Britain?
Answer: Robin
Question: Of what is Dipsophobia the fear?
Answer: Drinking
Question: What has varieties called Alicante, Moneymaker and Ailsa Craig?
Answer: Tomato
Question: 'Hedera helix' is better known as what?
Answer: Ivy
Question: How many chambers has the heart?
Answer: 4
Question: Which Sunday is Low Sunday or Quasimodo Sunday?
Answer: The first Sunday after Easter.
Question: What is the shaft of a feather called?
Answer: Quill
Question: Which ‘rodent’ first appeared on desk tops in January 1983?
Answer: Mouse
Question: What type of creature is a painted lady?
Answer: Butterfly
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of frogs?
Answer: Army
Question: What colour are budgerigars in the wild?
Answer: Green body and yellow face. It is the Australian grass parakeet.
Answer: Curare
Question: What is the largest fruit crop on earth?
Answer: Grapes, followed by bananas.
Question: What would a galvanometer be used to measure?
Answer: Detecting and measuring small electric currents. (electricity).
Question: If you were an Ungulate what would you have?
Answer: Hoves
Question: Who wrote the 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'?
Answer: Edward Gibbon
Question: Soyuz was the name of a Russian spacecraft, but what does the name mean?
Answer: Union
Question: Who invented Braille?
Answer: Louis Braille in 1829
Question: What is the Fahrenheit equivalent of 20 degrees centigrade?
Answer: 68
Question: What do you call an eight sided figure?
Answer: Octagon
Question: What is the official bird of Britain?
Answer: Robin
Question: Of what is Dipsophobia the fear?
Answer: Drinking
Question: What has varieties called Alicante, Moneymaker and Ailsa Craig?
Answer: Tomato
Question: 'Hedera helix' is better known as what?
Answer: Ivy
Question: How many chambers has the heart?
Answer: 4
Question: Which Sunday is Low Sunday or Quasimodo Sunday?
Answer: The first Sunday after Easter.
Question: What is the shaft of a feather called?
Answer: Quill
Question: Which ‘rodent’ first appeared on desk tops in January 1983?
Answer: Mouse
Question: What type of creature is a painted lady?
Answer: Butterfly
Question: What is the collective noun for a group of frogs?
Answer: Army
Question: What colour are budgerigars in the wild?
Answer: Green body and yellow face. It is the Australian grass parakeet.
SCIENCE QUIZ 4
Question: What is a Flemish giant?
Answer: Rabbit
Question: What is the collective noun for swallows in the air?
Answer: A flight
Question: Which is the largest planet in the solar system?
Answer: Jupiter
Question: What would you use Archimedes' Screw for?
Answer: Lifting water to a higher level
Question: What's the world’s most common Compound?
Answer: Water
Question: In which organ of the body is insulin produced?
Answer: Pancreas
Question: What is the Hardest and toughest known mineral?
Answer: Diamond. Indentation tests indicate that to dent a diamond requires a pressure of 8,000 kg/mm2.
Question: Where would you find an ISBN number?
Answer: On a book
Question: In chemistry, which chart shows elements arranged in groups having similar properties?
Answer: The periodic table
Question: What is the major diet of the Koala bear?
Answer: Eucalyptus leaves. They frequent tall eucalyptus trees, feeding only on the leaves and flowers of certain species of tree, as well as on mistletoe and box leaves.
Question: Which type of creature includes the most poisonous in the world?
Answer: Frogs
Question: There are 3 major food groups (excluding vitamins and minerals). Protein is one. What are the other two?
Answer: Carbohydrate and fat
Question: Which organ of the body secretes insulin?
Answer: Pancreas
Question: What does a somnambulist do?
Answer: Sleep walks
Question: How many minutes are there in a week?
Answer: 10 080
Question: A Beluga is a type of what?
Answer: Whale
Question: 'Ring of Bright Water' is a book about which creatures?
Answer: Otters
Question: A canton, halyard and field make up what item?
Answer: A flag
Question: Which animal sleeps standing up?
Answer: Horse
Question: Where does a badger live?
Answer: A cett
Answer: Rabbit
Question: What is the collective noun for swallows in the air?
Answer: A flight
Question: Which is the largest planet in the solar system?
Answer: Jupiter
Question: What would you use Archimedes' Screw for?
Answer: Lifting water to a higher level
Question: What's the world’s most common Compound?
Answer: Water
Question: In which organ of the body is insulin produced?
Answer: Pancreas
Question: What is the Hardest and toughest known mineral?
Answer: Diamond. Indentation tests indicate that to dent a diamond requires a pressure of 8,000 kg/mm2.
Question: Where would you find an ISBN number?
Answer: On a book
Question: In chemistry, which chart shows elements arranged in groups having similar properties?
Answer: The periodic table
Question: What is the major diet of the Koala bear?
Answer: Eucalyptus leaves. They frequent tall eucalyptus trees, feeding only on the leaves and flowers of certain species of tree, as well as on mistletoe and box leaves.
Question: Which type of creature includes the most poisonous in the world?
Answer: Frogs
Question: There are 3 major food groups (excluding vitamins and minerals). Protein is one. What are the other two?
Answer: Carbohydrate and fat
Question: Which organ of the body secretes insulin?
Answer: Pancreas
Question: What does a somnambulist do?
Answer: Sleep walks
Question: How many minutes are there in a week?
Answer: 10 080
Question: A Beluga is a type of what?
Answer: Whale
Question: 'Ring of Bright Water' is a book about which creatures?
Answer: Otters
Question: A canton, halyard and field make up what item?
Answer: A flag
Question: Which animal sleeps standing up?
Answer: Horse
Question: Where does a badger live?
Answer: A cett
SCIENCE QUIZ 3
Question: If I was your age ten years before you were born and I’m 50, how old are you?
Answer: 20
Question: Which gas is the main element in air?
Answer: Nitrogen (70%)
Question: By what name is solid carbon dioxide known?
Answer: Dry Ice
Question: What is the only known substance that naturally exists on Earth in all three chemical states?
Answer: Water
Question: In nature, what does a dendrologist study?
Answer: Trees
Question: What is the only gemstone to be composed of one single element?
Answer: Diamond
Question: How many stars make up Orion's belt?
Answer: 3
Question: The invention of what in 1867, made Alfred Nobel famous?
Answer: Dynamite
Question: In which American state is Cape Canaveral, a launching site for space travel?
Answer: Florida
Question: Yellow gold contains 10% of what other metal?
Answer: Copper
Question: The terms curd and whey are associated with making what?
Answer: Cheese
Question: A poult is the young of which creature?
Answer: Turkey or pheasant
Question: Who hit a golf shot on the moon?
Answer: Alan Shepard
Question: In London, the Cambridge, the Lyric and the Adelphi are all what?
Answer: Theaters
Question: What sits on a dolly in a television studio?
Answer: A camera
Question: What number on the Beaufort scale represents a Hurricane'?
Answer: 12-17
Question: What two fruits grow on palms?
Answer: Coconuts and dates
Question: Roe fallow and sika are all kinds of what animal?
Answer: Deer
Question: In avoirdupois weight what is equivalent to 1016.5 kilograms?
Answer: Ton
Question: What did the British government do on the roads in order to reduce accidents in 1925?
Answer: Paint white lines.
Answer: 20
Question: Which gas is the main element in air?
Answer: Nitrogen (70%)
Question: By what name is solid carbon dioxide known?
Answer: Dry Ice
Question: What is the only known substance that naturally exists on Earth in all three chemical states?
Answer: Water
Question: In nature, what does a dendrologist study?
Answer: Trees
Question: What is the only gemstone to be composed of one single element?
Answer: Diamond
Question: How many stars make up Orion's belt?
Answer: 3
Question: The invention of what in 1867, made Alfred Nobel famous?
Answer: Dynamite
Question: In which American state is Cape Canaveral, a launching site for space travel?
Answer: Florida
Question: Yellow gold contains 10% of what other metal?
Answer: Copper
Question: The terms curd and whey are associated with making what?
Answer: Cheese
Question: A poult is the young of which creature?
Answer: Turkey or pheasant
Question: Who hit a golf shot on the moon?
Answer: Alan Shepard
Question: In London, the Cambridge, the Lyric and the Adelphi are all what?
Answer: Theaters
Question: What sits on a dolly in a television studio?
Answer: A camera
Question: What number on the Beaufort scale represents a Hurricane'?
Answer: 12-17
Question: What two fruits grow on palms?
Answer: Coconuts and dates
Question: Roe fallow and sika are all kinds of what animal?
Answer: Deer
Question: In avoirdupois weight what is equivalent to 1016.5 kilograms?
Answer: Ton
Question: What did the British government do on the roads in order to reduce accidents in 1925?
Answer: Paint white lines.
SCIENCE QUIZ 2
Question: What is the name of the layer between the crust and the core of the earth?
Answer: The mantle.
Question: What is belladonna commonly known as?
Answer: Deadly Nightshade.
Question: What is the offspring of a donkey and a horse called?
Answer: A mule (or a hinny)
Question: In anatomy what are the nates?
Answer: The buttocks.
Question: What is the number 3.142 more usually known as?
Answer: Pi
Question: Who invented the jet engine in 1930?
Answer: Frank Whittle
Question: What does 'E' represent in E = MC2?
Answer: Energy
Question: What is the green pigment found in most plants that is responsible for absorbing light energy?
Answer: Chlorophyll
Question: What is the largest flat fish species?
Answer: Halibut
Question: Where is the smallest bone in the body?
Answer: In the ear - the Stirrup
Question: How many sides does a rhombus have?
Answer: 4
Question: On which day is Remembrance Day?
Answer: The Sunday closest to November 11th
Question: What is the distance between the two rails on a railway track called?
Answer: Gauge
Question: Which company owns 'Hotmail', the Internet based e-mail system?
Answer: Microsoft
Question: What does an 'Anemometer' measure ?
Answer: Windspeed
Question: Was 1994 a leap year?
Answer: No
Question: How many sheets of paper are there in a ream?
Answer: 500
Question: Which motoring aid was invented by Percy Shaw?
Answer: Cats eyes
Question: Which motoring aid was invented by Percy Shaw?
Answer: Cats eyes
Question: What is 65 per cent of 60?
Answer: 39
Answer: The mantle.
Question: What is belladonna commonly known as?
Answer: Deadly Nightshade.
Question: What is the offspring of a donkey and a horse called?
Answer: A mule (or a hinny)
Question: In anatomy what are the nates?
Answer: The buttocks.
Question: What is the number 3.142 more usually known as?
Answer: Pi
Question: Who invented the jet engine in 1930?
Answer: Frank Whittle
Question: What does 'E' represent in E = MC2?
Answer: Energy
Question: What is the green pigment found in most plants that is responsible for absorbing light energy?
Answer: Chlorophyll
Question: What is the largest flat fish species?
Answer: Halibut
Question: Where is the smallest bone in the body?
Answer: In the ear - the Stirrup
Question: How many sides does a rhombus have?
Answer: 4
Question: On which day is Remembrance Day?
Answer: The Sunday closest to November 11th
Question: What is the distance between the two rails on a railway track called?
Answer: Gauge
Question: Which company owns 'Hotmail', the Internet based e-mail system?
Answer: Microsoft
Question: What does an 'Anemometer' measure ?
Answer: Windspeed
Question: Was 1994 a leap year?
Answer: No
Question: How many sheets of paper are there in a ream?
Answer: 500
Question: Which motoring aid was invented by Percy Shaw?
Answer: Cats eyes
Question: Which motoring aid was invented by Percy Shaw?
Answer: Cats eyes
Question: What is 65 per cent of 60?
Answer: 39
SCIENCE QUIZ 1
Question: What name is given to calfskin, dressed and prepared for writing on?
Answer: Vellum
Question: In 1884, what was invented by Lewis Waterman?
Answer: Fountain Pen
Question: What is a female bear called?
Answer: Sow
Question: What killer disease was controlled by Jonas Salk’s vaccine?
Answer: Polio
Question: Which is the world’s tallest mammal?
Answer: The Giraffe
Question: What are the young of Squirrels called?
Answer: Kittens
Question: What is the main element in Bronze?
Answer: Copper
Question: What type of fuel do jet aircraft use?
Answer: Kerosene
Question: What is the second month of the year to have exactly 30 days?
Answer: June
Question: Which colourless, odourless light gas is used to lift airships?
Answer: Helium
Question: What is the fraction usually given as an approximation for PI?
Answer: 22/7
Question: At sea, between which hours is the first watch?
Answer: 8pm and Midnight
Question: What type of creature is the Aberdeen?
Answer: Cow/Bull
Question: What do the Australians call the yellow dogs that are regarded as serious pests in their Country?
Answer: Dingoes
Question: What is the sum of degrees in the internal angles in a triangle?
Answer: 180 degrees
Question: What is the national bird of New Zealand?
Answer: The kiwi
Question: What name is given to plants that last for many years?
Answer: Perennials
Question: What does PVC stand for as in the compound PVC?
Answer: Polyvinyl Chloride
Question: Thor Heyerdal's raft the 'kon-tiki' was made of what type of wood?
Answer: Balsa
Question: Where, in a household, would you find a magnetron?
Answer: In a microwave oven.
Answer: Vellum
Question: In 1884, what was invented by Lewis Waterman?
Answer: Fountain Pen
Question: What is a female bear called?
Answer: Sow
Question: What killer disease was controlled by Jonas Salk’s vaccine?
Answer: Polio
Question: Which is the world’s tallest mammal?
Answer: The Giraffe
Question: What are the young of Squirrels called?
Answer: Kittens
Question: What is the main element in Bronze?
Answer: Copper
Question: What type of fuel do jet aircraft use?
Answer: Kerosene
Question: What is the second month of the year to have exactly 30 days?
Answer: June
Question: Which colourless, odourless light gas is used to lift airships?
Answer: Helium
Question: What is the fraction usually given as an approximation for PI?
Answer: 22/7
Question: At sea, between which hours is the first watch?
Answer: 8pm and Midnight
Question: What type of creature is the Aberdeen?
Answer: Cow/Bull
Question: What do the Australians call the yellow dogs that are regarded as serious pests in their Country?
Answer: Dingoes
Question: What is the sum of degrees in the internal angles in a triangle?
Answer: 180 degrees
Question: What is the national bird of New Zealand?
Answer: The kiwi
Question: What name is given to plants that last for many years?
Answer: Perennials
Question: What does PVC stand for as in the compound PVC?
Answer: Polyvinyl Chloride
Question: Thor Heyerdal's raft the 'kon-tiki' was made of what type of wood?
Answer: Balsa
Question: Where, in a household, would you find a magnetron?
Answer: In a microwave oven.
GEOGRAPHY QUIZ 22
Question: The Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratory is better known by which name?
Answer: Jodrell Bank
Question: Which is the largest Fresh water lake in the world?
Answer: Superior
Question: Which country is home to Grolsch lager?
Answer: Holland (The Netherlands)
Question: What is the capital of Venezuela?
Answer: Caracus
Question: Which is the world’s oldest airline still using its original name?
Answer: KLM or Royal Dutch Airlines (Koninklijke Luchtvaart Maatschappij)
Question: Which is the only US state to begin with the letter 'P'?
Answer: Pennsylvania
Question: Two main London railway stations have the word "Cross" in their names. Name both?
Answer: Kings cross and Charing cross
Question: What is the state capital of Alaska?
Answer: Juneau
Question: What's the largest Scandinavian country?
Answer: Sweden
Answer: Jodrell Bank
Question: Which is the largest Fresh water lake in the world?
Answer: Superior
Question: Which country is home to Grolsch lager?
Answer: Holland (The Netherlands)
Question: What is the capital of Venezuela?
Answer: Caracus
Question: Which is the world’s oldest airline still using its original name?
Answer: KLM or Royal Dutch Airlines (Koninklijke Luchtvaart Maatschappij)
Question: Which is the only US state to begin with the letter 'P'?
Answer: Pennsylvania
Question: Two main London railway stations have the word "Cross" in their names. Name both?
Answer: Kings cross and Charing cross
Question: What is the state capital of Alaska?
Answer: Juneau
Question: What's the largest Scandinavian country?
Answer: Sweden
GEOGRAPHY QUIZ 21
Question: The Bill Shankly stand can be found at which football club's ground?
Answer: Preston North End
Question: Where in London would you find Poet’s Corner?
Answer: Westminster Abbey
Question: Where is 'Thatcher Day' celebrated on January 11th?
Answer: The Falkland Islands
Question: In Paris twelve Avenues meet at which famous landmark?
Answer: Arc de Triomph
Question: Which country produces 70% of the world's olive oil?
Answer: Greece
Question: Toronto is the capital of which Canadian province?
Answer: Ontario
Question: The Dead Sea can be found in which 2 countries?
Answer: Israel and Jordon
Question: In which continent is the world's largest glacier?
Answer: Antarctica
Question: What is the highest mountain in the Alps?
Answer: Mont Blanc
Question: What cheese shares its name with an English Gorge?
Answer: Cheddar
Question: Which canal took 10 years to build and opened in 1869?
Answer: The Suez Canal
Question: In which country is Acapulco?
Answer: Mexico
Question: Which Welsh Island is also known as Ynys Mon?
Answer: Anglesey
Question: In England, what is the Common name for the Central Criminal Court?
Answer: The Old Bailey
Question: In which ocean are the Canary Islands?
Answer: Atlantic
Question: At which ski resort would you see the Cresta Run?
Answer: St. Moritz
Question: Apart from London name one other city in Britain have an underground railway system?
Answer: Glasgow, Liverpool, Newcastle
Question: What is the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain more popularly known as?
Answer: Eros
Question: What is the second largest island in the world?
Answer: New Guinea (Greenland is the largest)
Question: How many countries are still members of the British Commonwealth?
Answer: 53
Answer: Preston North End
Question: Where in London would you find Poet’s Corner?
Answer: Westminster Abbey
Question: Where is 'Thatcher Day' celebrated on January 11th?
Answer: The Falkland Islands
Question: In Paris twelve Avenues meet at which famous landmark?
Answer: Arc de Triomph
Question: Which country produces 70% of the world's olive oil?
Answer: Greece
Question: Toronto is the capital of which Canadian province?
Answer: Ontario
Question: The Dead Sea can be found in which 2 countries?
Answer: Israel and Jordon
Question: In which continent is the world's largest glacier?
Answer: Antarctica
Question: What is the highest mountain in the Alps?
Answer: Mont Blanc
Question: What cheese shares its name with an English Gorge?
Answer: Cheddar
Question: Which canal took 10 years to build and opened in 1869?
Answer: The Suez Canal
Question: In which country is Acapulco?
Answer: Mexico
Question: Which Welsh Island is also known as Ynys Mon?
Answer: Anglesey
Question: In England, what is the Common name for the Central Criminal Court?
Answer: The Old Bailey
Question: In which ocean are the Canary Islands?
Answer: Atlantic
Question: At which ski resort would you see the Cresta Run?
Answer: St. Moritz
Question: Apart from London name one other city in Britain have an underground railway system?
Answer: Glasgow, Liverpool, Newcastle
Question: What is the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain more popularly known as?
Answer: Eros
Question: What is the second largest island in the world?
Answer: New Guinea (Greenland is the largest)
Question: How many countries are still members of the British Commonwealth?
Answer: 53
GEOGRAPHY QUIZ 20
Question: What are the 'aurora borealis' also known as?
Answer: Northern Lights - high-altitude luminosity occurring most frequently above 60° north or south latitude.
Question: What is the southern limit of the Tropics called?
Answer: Tropic of Capricorn
Question: Which is the largest Greek Island?
Answer: Crete
Question: What is the main crop of the Greek island of Corfu?
Answer: Olives
Question: What do you call somebody from Monaco?
Answer: Monagasque
Question: What's the Capital city of the Philippines?
Answer: Manilla
Question: Mount Rushmore in America has 4 presidents heads carved into it. George Washington and Abraham Lincoln are two of them. Give me either of the other two.
Answer: Thomas Jefferson or Theodore Roosevelt
Question: What is the name given to the imaginary line of 180 degrees longitude?
Answer: International Date Line
Question: What is the state Capital of Colorado?
Answer: Denver
Question: In nature, the earth is composed of 3 main parts, the Crust, the mantle and what?
Answer: The Core
Question: Which are the only 2 countries with an X in their names?
Answer: Mexico/Luxembourg
Question: What are the two main colours on Argentina's flag?
Answer: Blue/White (It also has a yellow sun in the middle known as the sun of May)
Question: Where is the only place that the American flag flies 24 hours a day - never raised, never lowered, and never saluted?
Answer: On the Moon
Question: Which military base in North Kentucky holds the US Gold Reserves?
Answer: Fort Knox
Question: Which small Norwegian town hosted the 1994 Winter Olympics?
Answer: Lillehammer
Question: Which sea lies between Italy and the former Yugoslavia
Answer: Adriatic
Question: In which European country is the city of Strasbourg?
Answer: France
Question: Which river forms much of the border between England and Scotland?
Answer: Tweed
Question: Where in London would you find Speakers Corner?
Answer: Hyde park
Question: Which European City has the highest mileage of Canals in the World?
Answer: Birmingham
Answer: Northern Lights - high-altitude luminosity occurring most frequently above 60° north or south latitude.
Question: What is the southern limit of the Tropics called?
Answer: Tropic of Capricorn
Question: Which is the largest Greek Island?
Answer: Crete
Question: What is the main crop of the Greek island of Corfu?
Answer: Olives
Question: What do you call somebody from Monaco?
Answer: Monagasque
Question: What's the Capital city of the Philippines?
Answer: Manilla
Question: Mount Rushmore in America has 4 presidents heads carved into it. George Washington and Abraham Lincoln are two of them. Give me either of the other two.
Answer: Thomas Jefferson or Theodore Roosevelt
Question: What is the name given to the imaginary line of 180 degrees longitude?
Answer: International Date Line
Question: What is the state Capital of Colorado?
Answer: Denver
Question: In nature, the earth is composed of 3 main parts, the Crust, the mantle and what?
Answer: The Core
Question: Which are the only 2 countries with an X in their names?
Answer: Mexico/Luxembourg
Question: What are the two main colours on Argentina's flag?
Answer: Blue/White (It also has a yellow sun in the middle known as the sun of May)
Question: Where is the only place that the American flag flies 24 hours a day - never raised, never lowered, and never saluted?
Answer: On the Moon
Question: Which military base in North Kentucky holds the US Gold Reserves?
Answer: Fort Knox
Question: Which small Norwegian town hosted the 1994 Winter Olympics?
Answer: Lillehammer
Question: Which sea lies between Italy and the former Yugoslavia
Answer: Adriatic
Question: In which European country is the city of Strasbourg?
Answer: France
Question: Which river forms much of the border between England and Scotland?
Answer: Tweed
Question: Where in London would you find Speakers Corner?
Answer: Hyde park
Question: Which European City has the highest mileage of Canals in the World?
Answer: Birmingham
GEOGRAPHY QUIZ 19
Question: The Province of Flanders is in which country?
Answer: Belgium
Question: The Vatican City is within which other city?
Answer: Rome
Question: In which country is Marrakesh?
Answer: Morocco
Question: What is the International vehicle registration letter(s) for Germany?
Answer: D
Question: Mount Elbert is the highest peak in which mountain range?
Answer: The Rockies (USA)
Question: Which was the first European country to give all women the vote?
Answer: Finland (Scandinavia is Norway, Sweden and Denmark)
Question: In which country is the region of Dalmatia?
Answer: Croatia
Question: In which country is the site of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon?
Answer: Iraq (60 miles south of Baghdad)
Question: Which US organisation's headquarters is situated in Langley, Virginia?
Answer: CIA
Question: What is the capital of Finland?
Answer: Helsinki
Question: What is the world's largest sea?
Answer: South China Sea
Question: In which country are the Churchill Falls?
Answer: Canada (Labrador)
Question: What is the state capital of Massachusetts?
Answer: Boston
Question: What covers 85% of Algeria?
Answer: Sahara
Question: What's the largest Island in the Mediterranean sea?
Answer: Sicily
Question: Which location in the United States was originally known as Shangri-La, and is now named after President Eisenhower's grandson.
Answer: Camp David
Question: What lies between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario?
Answer: Niagra Falls
Question: The worlds largest fruit is called the love fruit or the Coco de Mer, and can weigh up to 50 pounds (23kg). Which is the only Country it grows in?
Answer: Seychelles
Question: Which is the only US state to start with the letter "H"?
Answer: Hawaii
Question: New York city is subdivided into five boroughs. Three of them are Queens, Brooklyn and Staten Island. What are the other two?
Answer: The Bronx, and Manhattan.
Answer: Belgium
Question: The Vatican City is within which other city?
Answer: Rome
Question: In which country is Marrakesh?
Answer: Morocco
Question: What is the International vehicle registration letter(s) for Germany?
Answer: D
Question: Mount Elbert is the highest peak in which mountain range?
Answer: The Rockies (USA)
Question: Which was the first European country to give all women the vote?
Answer: Finland (Scandinavia is Norway, Sweden and Denmark)
Question: In which country is the region of Dalmatia?
Answer: Croatia
Question: In which country is the site of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon?
Answer: Iraq (60 miles south of Baghdad)
Question: Which US organisation's headquarters is situated in Langley, Virginia?
Answer: CIA
Question: What is the capital of Finland?
Answer: Helsinki
Question: What is the world's largest sea?
Answer: South China Sea
Question: In which country are the Churchill Falls?
Answer: Canada (Labrador)
Question: What is the state capital of Massachusetts?
Answer: Boston
Question: What covers 85% of Algeria?
Answer: Sahara
Question: What's the largest Island in the Mediterranean sea?
Answer: Sicily
Question: Which location in the United States was originally known as Shangri-La, and is now named after President Eisenhower's grandson.
Answer: Camp David
Question: What lies between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario?
Answer: Niagra Falls
Question: The worlds largest fruit is called the love fruit or the Coco de Mer, and can weigh up to 50 pounds (23kg). Which is the only Country it grows in?
Answer: Seychelles
Question: Which is the only US state to start with the letter "H"?
Answer: Hawaii
Question: New York city is subdivided into five boroughs. Three of them are Queens, Brooklyn and Staten Island. What are the other two?
Answer: The Bronx, and Manhattan.
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