Sciences
Presidents
Job Titles
Animals
Famous Places
100

The scientific study of the behavior, structure, physiology, classification, and distribution of animals.

Zoology 

100

Before being unanimously elected President both in 1788 & 1792 this President was the lead general for the colonial army in the American Revolutionary War.

George Washington

100

This kind of technician that workrs on heating, ventilation, and air conditioning in homes and businesses. 

HVAC

100

The largest living lizard on earth. 

Komodo Dragon

100

This structure in Paris, France was built in 1889 for the Exposition Universelle, which was to celebrate the 100th year anniversary of the French Revolution. 

Eiffel Tower

200
The branch of science concerned with fossil animals and plants.


Paleontology

200

This President's Gettysburg Address is the most well-known speech ever given by an English-speaking politician and has been reprinted and recited countless times since he delivered it on November 19, 1863.

Abraham Lincoln

200

A doctor specializing in children and their diseases


pediatrician





200

While Giant Pandas are more closely related to bears, smaller Red Pandas are more closely related to to this trash loving critter. 

Racoons

200

This sculpture in South Dakota features the 60-foot-tall heads of four United States presidents: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln, chosen to represent the nation's birth, growth, development, and preservation. 

Mount Rushmore

300

The study of the Earth's crust and the processes that have shaped its surface throughout history.

Geology

300

Known as the conservation President after establishing approximately 230 million acres of public lands between 1901 and 1909, some might know him better as the inspiration for the Teddy Bear.  

Theodore Roosevelt

300

This abbreviation is used for the highest-ranking person in a company or other institution, ultimately responsible for making managerial decisions.

CEO (chief executive officer)

300

The only marsupial native to North America

Opossum 

300

This group of three waterfalls spanning the border between the province of Ontario in Canada and the state of New York in the United States was once considered a popular honeymoon destination. 

Niagara Falls

400

The study of the Universe and everything in it, including planets, stars, galaxies, comets, and black holes.

Astronomy

400

This President proposed America going to the moon by the end of the decade in 1961, but did not live to see it happen in 1969 after being assassinated in 1963. 

John F. Kennedy

400

Another name for a driver that transports people in a limousine or other kind of luxury vehicle. 

chauffeur

400

A foal is the name of the baby version of this animal.

Horse

400

Though it may look like a palace, this white marble, domed structure is actually India’s most iconic mausoleum. 

Taj Mahal

500

The scientific study of plants—how plants function, what they look like, how they are related to each other, where they grow, how people make use of plants, and how plants evolved.

Botony

500

This President's New Deal was a series of wide-reaching economic, social, and political reforms enacted in the United States between 1933 and 1938, in response to the Great Depression, which had started in 1929.

Franklin D Roosevelt

500

A skilled professional who organizes, plans and executes projects across various industries that works within the constraints of budgets, schedules, and resources to ensure projects are completed and delivered on time.  

Project Manager

500

This uninvited picnic guest is the only other animal besides humans to raise livestock, grow crops and perform surgery. 

Ants

500

This natural structure towers over the surrounding area in the Black Hills of Wyoming and was featured in the 1977 movie Close Encounters Of The Third Kind. 

Devils Tower 

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