Great Lakes
US States
Mapping
Continents and Oceans
Mountain Ranges
100

What is the acronym that can help you remember the Great Lakes?

HOMES

100

How many states are there?

50

100

What part of the map explains the symbols and/or colors used?

Key or Legend

100

How many continents are there?

7

100

Which mountain range is taller and more jagged?

The Rocky Mountains

200

How many Great Lakes are there?

5

200

Name 5 states.

Answers will vary

200

Name the cardinal directions and intermediate directions.

North, South, East, West, Northeast, Southeast, Northwest, Southwest

200

Which ocean is the largest?

The Pacific

200

What caused the Appalachian Mountains to be shorter and more rounded than the Rocky Mountains? 

Erosion

300

What ocean do the Great Lakes flow into?

The Atlantic Ocean
300

What is the capital of New York?

Albany
300

If you travel from the Rocky Mountains to the Appalachian Mountains, what direction are you going?

East

300

Which continent is China on?

Asia

300

Which mountain range is longer?

Rocky Mountains

400
What is the main reason why fishing is no longer a big industry?

The water is polluted

400

What are the two states that are not a part of the contiguous United States?

Alaska and Hawaii

400

Name 5 examples of geographical features you might see on a map.

Answers will vary: lake, river, pond, mountains, desert, park, forest, woods, etc.

400

Which ocean is touching Antarctica?

The Southern Ocean

400

How many states do the Rocky Mountains go through? How many states do the Appalachian Mountains go through?

Rocky Mountains: 11

Appalachian Mountains: 14

500

Name 3 of the Great Lakes

Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior

500

There are 5 regions in the United States.Name them all.

Midwest, West, Southeast, Southwest, North

500

What is the word for the science of creating maps?

Cartography

500

How do you spell the smallest continent?

Australia

500

How are mountain ranges formed? Write 2 complete sentences.

Answers will vary. Plate tectonics, or movement from the Earth's tectonic plates. When they collide, the crumple and fold until the rocks are forced upwards.