Seasons
Rotation and Revolution
Equinox and Solstices
Terms
Miscellaneous
100

This season is characterized by having longer periods of daylight.

What is summer?

100

This is how long one orbit takes for the earth.

What is 365 days?

100

This is the number of equinoxes and solstices there are.

What are 2 solstices and 2 equinoxs?

100

This is when day is equal to night.

What is Equinox?

100

These are all the seasons.

What are winter, spring, summer, and autumn/ fall?

200

This season occurs 6 months after fall.

What is spring?

200

This causes day and night.

What is the rotation of the earth?

200

These are seasons that Equinoxes occur.

What are spring and autumn/fall?

200

This is one half of a sphere... such as one half of the Earth.

What is Hemisphere?

200

If it is summer in the northern hemisphere, this is the season in the Southern Hemisphere.

What is winter?

300

This season is characterized by having shorter amounts of daylight hours.

What is winter?

300

This takes 24 hours to complete one.

What is rotation?

300

These are the seasons that the solstices occur.

What are winter and summer?

300

The Earth spins on this tilted angle.

What is Axis?

300

The revolution of this takes 365 days.

What is the Earth revolving around the sun?

400

This season is occurring in the northern hemisphere when the Southern Hemisphere has spring.

What is fall?

400

This causes the sun to look like it rises in the east and sets in the west.

What is the earth's rotation?

400

This is the beginning of summer and winter. 

What is solstice?

400

This takes 365 days to complete.

What is Revolution?

400

This is the number of seasons we have.

What is 4?

500

This season officially begins on March 21st.

What is spring?

500

This is the orbit or movement of one object around another.

What is revolution?

500

This is when either of the Earth's poles reaches its maximum tilt away from the sun.

What is Winter Solstice?

500

This means standing sun.

What is Solstice ?

500

This causes earth tides.

What is gravitational pull from the moon?