Celestial Bodies
Up Up and Away
Weather or Not
Things With Wings
On Top of Olympus
100

Often called the "Red Planet," it's the fourth planet from the sun. 

Mars

100

In 1993, these two brothers made the first controlled, powered airplane flight at Kitty Hawk.

The Wright Brothers

100

These giant tropical storms are called cyclones in the South Pacific and "this word" in the Atlantic. 

Hurricanes

100

This flightless bird is the largest in the world, though it can run up to 43 mph.

An Ostrich

100

In Greek mythology, this son of Daedalus flew too close to the sun, melting his wax wings. 

Icarus

200

This "icy" visitor orbits the sun every 75 to 76 years and was last seen in 1986.

Halley's Comet

200

This giant of the skies, the Boeing 747, is famously known by this name. 

The Jumbo Jet

200

This arc appears when sunlight is refracted and reflected by water droplets in the air.

A Rainbow

200

These are the only mammals capable of true sustained flight.

Bats

200

This son of Zeus wore a winged hat and winged sandals, allowing him to fly between the mortal world and the peak of Olympus.

Hermes

300

This is the colorful, shimmering display caused by solar particles hitting Earth's magnetic field near the poles.

The Auroras (or Northern/Southern Lights).
300

The 18th-century duo, the Montgolfier brothers, pioneered flight using this "buoyant" invention. 

The Hot Air Balloon

300

This is the temperature at which air must be cooled to become saturated with water vapor, leading to condensation. 

The Dew Point

300

This small bird is the only one capable of flying backwards.

Hummingbird

300

This giant hunter was placed among the stars by Zeus after being killed by a scorpion, and his "belt" is now one of the most recognizable sights in the night sky.

Orion

400

Light cannot escape the gravity of these cosmic objects, whose boundaries are called "event horizons." 

Black Holes

400

The Soviet Union kicked off the Space Race in 1957 by launching this first-ever artificial satellite.

Sputnik 1

400

This Spanish-named climate pattern occurs when sea surface temperatures in the central Pacific become warmer than average. 

El Nino

400

With a wingspan that can reach nearly 10 inches, the Queen Alexandra's Birdwing holds the record as the world's largest species of this insect.

A Butterfly

400

This giant golden bird, known as Aetos Dios, served as Zeus's personal messenger and carried his thunderbolts back to him. 

An Eagle

500

Spanning over 1,300 sq degrees and snaking across a quarter of the sky, this is the largest of the 88 official constellations. 

Hydra

500

When the supersonic Concorde retired in 2003, its final commercial flight was from New York City to this specific London airport.

Heathrow 

500

This colorful meteorological event occurs when dust from the Sahara Desert is blown into the atmosphere and falls with precipitation, staining the ground this color. 

Red (will accept: Blood Rain) 

500

Witnesses consistently described the Mothman as being about 7 ft tall with a 10-foot wingspan and these two glowing "hypnotic" facial features. 

Red Eyes

500

According to myth, our galaxy, the Milky Way, was created when milk from the breast of this Queen of the Gods was spilled across the sky. 

Hera

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