If Science Was Your Favorite Class
The Atmosphere and Beyond
Animal House
History
Dianne's Favorite Because It's Disney
100

This is the name given to animals that consume both plants and meat, (like Brian, for example). 

omnivore


100

The world's largest ocean, it so vast that most commercial flights avoid flying directly over it. 

Pacific Ocean

100

You can delight in your sense of achievement if you know this, the term for a group of lions. 

pride

100

"Summer sun, somethin's begun, but Ah! Oh the summer nights" in this country, which was the first to host the Olympic Games. 

Greece

100

"Tell us a joke," insist the friend's of Nemo's father, who is this type of fish. 

clownfish
200

The largest land animal, and it is the only one that can't jump. 

elephant

200

Though some say it was all filmed in a studio, this astronaut was the first to walk on the moon. 

Neil Armstrong

200

This is the only mammal that can fly, but it's also what makes a baseball fly. 

bat

200

She'd probably never believe it, but this young girl's diary, written while hiding from Nazis in Amsterdam, has been read by millions worldwide. 

Anne Frank

200

This cuddly, hunny-lovin' bear who lives in the Hundred Acre Wood recently starred in a horror film. 

Winnie the Pooh

300

The largest internal organ in the human body, or, the opposite of a dyer. 

liver

300

The planet with the most gravity, and according to schoolchildren's songs, it is also where boys go to "get more stupider."

Jupiter

300
Since its eye is bigger than its brain, this large bird rarely thinks before it looks. 

ostrich

300

Widely considered as the father of modern medicine, doctors' oaths are named for this guy. 

Hippocrates

300

Either one of these two nasty, drippy stepsisters of Cinderella. 

Anastasia or Drizella

400

The amount of elements in the periodic table. 

(Hint: it's six score minus two). 

118

400

Waxing gibbous and waning crescent are two of the moon's phases, of which there are a total of this many. 

8

400

Atrax robustus is the latin name for the world's most venomous spider, found on this continent. 

Australia

400

This civilization built Macchu-Picchu in modern-day Peru. 

Incas

400

Whether for his triangle or his wager, Rapunzel named her Chameleon after this mathematician in the film "Tangled."

Pascal

500

100 degrees is the boiling point for water in Celsius, but in Fahrenheit, it's this. 

212 degrees

500

Named for the top tip of Earth's axis, it is also known as the North Star. 

Polaris

500

One of Tolkien's Shire Hobbits takes his name from this, the world's fastest-flying bird. 

peregrine falcon

500

The first country to use paper money, they probably used it to buy all the gunpowder they invented. 

China

500

Although he saved the life of Princess Aurora, he ultimately married the Queen of England, but he did not outlive her. 

Prince Phillip