Life Under the Microscope
Brain and Body
Chemically Curious
Space and Time
What came first?
100

In this slimy state, bacterial resistance to antibiotics can jump by up to a factor of a thousand.  

What is a biofilm?

100

This organ uses about 20 percent of your resting energy budget despite making up only about 2 percent of body mass.

What is the brain?

100

This element, used in party balloons, is so rare on Earth that most commercial supplies come from deep natural gas wells.

What is helium?

100

This is the only place (outside of earth) where astronauts can find free snacks

What is the International Space Station?

100

Which came first: the discovery of vaccination or the first use of surgical anesthesia?

What is vaccination? 

(1796 vs 1846)

200

Of all known genomes, this organism currently holds the record for the largest, with over 100 billion base pairs.

What is a fern?

Specifically the "A 160 Gbp fork fern" plant

The ferns (Polypodiopsida or Polypodiophyta) are a group of vascular plants

200

This type of muscle fiber is fatigue-resistant and relies mostly on oxidative metabolism.

What are type I (slow-twitch) fibers?

200

This is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.

What is mercury?

200

This giant planet radiates more heat than it receives from the Sun because it is still shrinking under its own gravity

What is Jupiter?

200

Which came first: photography or recorded sound?

What is photography? 

(1839 vs 1877)

300

This cellular organelle was once a free-living microbe that merged with early eukaryotes.

What is the mitochondrion?

300

This hormone, discovered in the 1990s, is released from fat cells and signals energy status to the brain.

What is leptin?

300

This pH phenomenon explains why carbonated drinks taste sharper when cold.

What is increased CO₂ solubility leading to more carbonic acid?

300

This spacecraft is the farthest human-made object from Earth

What is Voyager 1?

300

Which came first: the publication of natural selection or the scientific understanding of how nerves control muscle contraction?  

What is natural selection?


(1859 vs later nineteenth-century neuromuscular physiology)

400

This water creature can revert its mature cells back into stem-like states, allowing it to return to a juvenile form.

What is Turritopsis dohrnii, aka the “immortal jellyfish”?

400

This reflex can persist in adults if there’s upper motor neuron damage, but in infants it’s completely normal.

What is the Babinski sign?

400

Diamond and graphite differ only in how the atoms bond, making them examples of this chemical concept.

What are allotropes?

400

This moon of Saturn has lakes made not of water but of liquid methane and ethane.  

What is Titan?

400

Which came first: X-ray imaging or the first powered airplane flight?

What is X-ray imaging?
(1895 vs 1903)