Sports
State of Michigan
National Landmarks
Food
Transport
100

This sport awards 6 points for a touchdown but allows either a 1- or 2-point conversion afterward.

Football

100

Lansing serves as Michigan’s capital, but this city is its largest by population.

Detroit?

100

This U.S. landmark appears on the back of the $5 bill.

Lincoln Memorial

100

This grain is traditionally used to make risotto.

Arborio rice?

100

This vehicle type uses a pantograph to draw electricity from overhead wires.

tram (or electric train)?

200

This country won the first modern Olympic Games in 1896.

Greece

200

This Great Lake touches Michigan but does not touch Ohio.

Lake Superior?

200

This bell, cracked during the 1800s, is housed in Philadelphia.

Liberty Bell?

200

Miso paste is most commonly made from fermented soybeans and this grain.

Rice

200

This term refers to the side-to-side movement of ships caused by waves.

A roll

300

The “Green Jacket” is awarded annually to the winner of this golf tournament.

The Masters

300

This is a Dutch themed city in Michigan

Holland

300

This monument honors Thomas Jefferson and sits on the Tidal Basin.

Jefferson Memorial?

300

This cooking technique involves submerging food in fat at a low temperature.

Confit 

300

This gauge measurement determines the distance between railroad tracks.

Track gauge 

400

This statistic measures earned runs allowed per nine innings pitched in baseball.

ERA (Earned Run Average)?

400

The Mackinac Bridge connects the Lower Peninsula to this specific Upper Peninsula county.

Mackinac County?

400

This national monument in Wyoming was America’s first designated national monument.

Devils Tower?

400

This French sauce, one of the five “mother sauces,” is made from egg yolks and butter.

Hollandaise sauce?

400

This international agreement standardizes road signs and signals across many countries.

Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals?

500

This boxer was nicknamed “The Greatest” and was born Cassius Marcellus Clay

Muhammad Ali?

500

This Michigan town was the site of the 1936–1937 raw materials Sit-Down Strike, a pivotal labor event.

Flint

500

This New Mexico site was where the first atomic bomb was tested in 1945.

Trinity Site?

500

This chemical reaction causes browning and flavor development when food is cooked at high heat.

Maillard reaction?

500

This aerodynamic force opposes thrust and increases with the square of velocity.

Drag
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