Capital Cities
Geography Terms
Physical Features
State/Provincial Capitals
Wild Card
100

The capital city of China.

Beijing

100

One of several very large landmasses on Earth.

Continent

100

One of 4 major bodies of salt water that surround the continents.

Ocean

100

The capital city of New York.

Albany

100

The four time zones of mainland North America.

Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific

200

The capital city of Norway.

Oslo

200

The branch of geography dealing with how human activity affects or is influenced by the earth's surface.

Human Geography

200

A large body of water completely or partly surrounded by land.

Sea

200

The capital city of Pennsylvania.

Harrisburg

200

Three kinds of plate tectonic boundaries.

Divergent, convergent, transform. 

300

The capital city of Sierra Leone.

Freetown

300

Areas with distinctive characteristics.

Region

300

A region of vegetation at high latitudes, high elevations, and characterized by cold temperatures and sparse vegetation.

Tundra

300

The capital city of Kansas.

Topeka

300

A measurement of population per unit area or unit volume.

Population density 

400

The capital city of Switzerland.

Bern

400

The meridian passing through Greenwich, England, designated as the zero meridian (0°) by an international conference in 1884.

Prime Meridian

400

An area of flat or rolling land at a high elevation, about 300-3,000 feet high.

Plateau

400

The capital city of the Northwest Territories. 

Yellowknife

400

Height above a given level, especially sea level.

Elevation

500

The capital city of Yemen.

Sanaa

500

The most northerly of the five major circles of latitude that mark maps of the Earth.

Arctic circle

500

A broad, inland body of water, often between a coastline and one or more islands off the coast.

Sound 

500

The capital city of New Brunswick.

Fredericton

500

A graphical representation of basic climatic parameters.

Climograph

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