Baseball
California Facts
Space
Famous Inventors
European Capitals
100

With 27, this New York baseball team has more world series wins than any other team -- the next best team has only 11.

The New York Yankees

100

When gold was struck in 1849 at this location in Coloma, more than 100,000 people, nicknamed “forty-niners,” rushed to California to seek their fortunes.

Sutter's Mill

100

There are an estimated 100-400 billion of these in our galaxy, the Milky Way.

Stars

100

He is known for his work with light bulbs, electricity, film and audio devices, and much more

Thomas Edison

100

Nicknamed the "City of Light," this capital was one of the first European cities to adopt street lighting

Paris

200

This team was approved to move west the same year as the Brooklyn Giants.

The New York Giants

200

The California Valley variety of this pheasant is the official state bird.

Quail

200

This orbiting astronomical body is moving approximately 3.8 cm away from our planet every year

The moon

200

Eli Whitney invented this machine that separates seeds, hulls, and other unwanted materials from cotton after it has been picked. 

The cotton gin

200

While the city center and most residential areas are on the Norwegian mainland, this capital city counts many islands within its limits.

Oslo

300

The Texas Rangers play in the Dallas metro area -- in this city to be exact.

Arlington

300

These spiny plants are native to the Mojave Desert and so widespread in the region that they have a national park named after them.

Joshua trees

300

This region occupied by a great many solid, irregularly shaped bodies is located in an area of space between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

The asteroid belt

300

After the telephone, he invented the "photophone," a device that enabled sound to be transmitted on a beam of light 

Alexander Graham Bell

300

Unsurprisingly to many, the locals in this capital drink more beer per capita than any other nation in the world – they live in the home of Pilsner, after all

Prague

400

More baseball hall of famers have played this position than any other.

Pitcher

400

These are the highest and lowest points in the contiguous US -- hint: they're not too far apart.

Mount Whitney and Death Valley

400

Of 1 million, 10 million, or 100 million, the number of Earths that could fit inside the sun.

1 million

400

This agricultural chemist invented 300 uses for peanuts and hundreds of more uses for soybeans, pecans, and sweet potatoes. He also happened to be black.

George Washington Carver

400

Many travelers put St. Basil’s cathedral on their bucket list in this capital, the second most populous city on the European continent.

Moscow

500

Of St. Louis, Toronto, Cleveland, and Baltimore the city that does not have a team named after a bird.

Cleveland

500

There are 21 of these along the historic Royal Road. the El Camino Real in Spanish.

Missions

500

The longest one of these rare solar system events can last is 7.5 minutes. Sounds "totally" cool to me.

Total Solar Eclipse
500

This British inventor and industrial designer revolutionized vacuum cleaning with the invention of the first bagless vacuum cleaner

Sir James Dyson

500

This capital is often called The City of Music as more famous composers have lived here than in any other city in the world

Vienna

M
e
n
u