Geography General Knowledge #7

Can you answer these random geography questions?
Includes questions from both physical geography and human geography
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Last updated: November 19, 2023
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First submittedMarch 24, 2013
Times taken158,887
Average score60.0%
Rating4.44
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Question
Answer
What is the largest country in the world by population?
India
What is the highest mountain range that is NOT in Asia?
Andes
What family name is shared by approximately 40% of Vietnamese people?
Nguyen
What strait separates Alaska and Russia?
Bering Strait
What country has a town named Marathon, after which the race was named?
Greece
What is the world's largest freshwater lake by surface area?
Lake Superior
What A word means "island chain"?
Archipelago
What is the only country where komodo dragons live in the wild?
Indonesia
What building has the street address 1600 Pennsylvania Ave?
The White House
What country shares its name with a U.S. state?
Georgia
What strait, starting with the letter B, divides Europe from Asia at Istanbul?
Bosphorus
In what city would you find the Kowloon peninsula?
Hong Kong
What English town is famous for its white cliffs?
Dover
What formerly uninhabited island, starting with the letter P, was settled by HMS Bounty mutineers?
Pitcairn Island
What is the second largest desert in Africa?
Kalahari Desert
What is the largest island in the Indian Ocean?
Madagascar
What's the German name for Germany?
Deutschland
What type of bird is depicted on a Canadian $1 coin?
Common Loon
What country does Vegemite come from?
Australia
What frequently-photographed building was Galileo said to have dropped a cannonball from?
Leaning Tower of Pisa
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Click on the names of the languages that actually exist without clicking any of the ones that don't.
66 Comments
+17
Level 53
Jul 29, 2013
Can't spell Archipelago.... grr.
+43
Level 92
Nov 2, 2018
To the JetPunk gulag you go.
+1
Level 58
Oct 30, 2025
same, had to look up how to spell it lol
+6
Level 52
Jul 30, 2013
Dover is definitely not a city
+12
Level ∞
Aug 13, 2015
Changed it to town.
+4
Level 72
Apr 3, 2021
It's a city in every sense but the narrow UK definition of a "legal" city. I mean, it's also a town, so I'm fine with using that in the clue, but if we agreed that Dover is not a city, we kind of would have to also agree that England is a country.
+2
Level 80
Apr 3, 2021
Country, without further specifications, usually means sovereign state. But the definition of city is more vague. It usually means large settlement, but how large is large? A population 100 000 is often taken as a threshold, although not exclusively. Dover has 33 000 people.
+7
Level 72
Apr 4, 2021
What do you mean, "often"? In most languages I know of, "city" is just a generic term for a non-rural settlement. While there may be legal definitions (in France, a "ville" is anything above 2.000 inhabitants), that's not how the term is used. When people say they come "from the city", they mean they live in an urban environment, no matter how many inhabitants it actually has. While Dover may not be a legal city in England, that definition makes no sense to anyone in the rest of the world. Are we expected, for any "cities of the world" quiz, to look up what the specific laws of that country deem a "city"? Are "municipalities", "communities", "federal districts", all cities, even though their particular legal status does not include the term "city"? I really think we should stick to a substantial definition of the word, otherwise, it becomes meaningless in an international context such as jetpunk.
+3
Level 72
Apr 4, 2021
Also, while I love England and have in fact lived and worked there, I like jetpunk's usual policy of not catering to English exceptionnalism and their overblown sense of entitlement and self-importance, which Brexit has so far made even worse (before the inevitable crash).
+4
Level 72
Apr 4, 2021
It's by no means all English people, by the way. In fact, I have never so weird a people as the "English", whatever that means. There is no average English person. Those I have met were all either nasty nationalistic entitled pricks, or some of the most kind and good-hearted people I've ever known, and that's true across all social classes. Weird, weird, place.
+4
Level 28
Apr 4, 2021
Gandalf, you do realise you are talking to yourself, right?
+15
Level 72
Apr 5, 2021
Please don't interrupt us ;-)
+2
Level 59
Dec 3, 2013
can hellespont be accepted
+6
Level 89
Mar 2, 2014
I don't think so, since Istanbul is specified...
+6
Level 89
Feb 2, 2016
Yeah, the Hellespont is the Dardanelles, not the Bosporus.
+3
Level 75
May 26, 2014
Had to look up the English spelling of that strait, knew it only in my language.
+3
Level 35
Jan 18, 2016
Easy peasy. Two minutes left.
+6
Level 66
Apr 4, 2021
Wow!!! It took you THAT long?
+7
Level 73
Feb 2, 2016
I thought Lake Baikal in Russia was the biggest freshwater lake?
+13
Level 79
Feb 2, 2016
yes, by volume
+8
Level 58
Dec 29, 2017
Boston Marathon is named after a city in the USA...
+8
Level 65
Apr 3, 2021
Is this a joke?
+2
Level 28
Jan 23, 2018
Please accept Moher for "English city famous for white cliffs." It is famous.
+18
Level 80
Jul 26, 2018
But Moher is neither a city nor is it in England.
+15
Level 60
Jul 27, 2018
Also, those cliffs aren't white.
+3
Level 76
Jun 17, 2019
Does it have cliffs though?
+1
Level 82
Dec 14, 2020
You're joking right?
+10
Level 72
Apr 3, 2021
Cliff Richard is pretty famous, and white. So, please accept London as an answer!
+1
Level 71
Aug 3, 2023
Dún do chlab.
+13
Level 43
Feb 20, 2018
Is it reasonable to accept just 'Pisa' as a shortened version?
+5
Level 73
Nov 1, 2018
Leaning tower was accepted for me.
+5
Level 54
Nov 12, 2018
But Pisa Tower was not.
+5
Level 76
Jun 17, 2019
Tower of Pisa was.
+4
Level 57
Nov 1, 2018
Tres facile
+3
Level 66
Nov 1, 2018
Isn't Caspian lake the largest in the world by surface, or is it considered a sea?
+3
Level 68
Nov 1, 2018
I think you have it backwards: it's called the Caspian Sea, but it's sometimes considered a lake. I don't know what exactly the dividing line between "salt water" and "fresh water" is, so I don't know whether it would qualify for this answer.
+7
Level 72
Apr 3, 2021
I think it has to do with the amount of salt in the water, but I'm no expert.
+2
Level 75
Nov 1, 2018
I wrote Pisa tower, wasnt accepted
+1
Level 51
Jul 2, 2023
No one calls it that
+4
Level 63
Aug 30, 2023
AndreasP96 does.
+3
Level 27
Nov 1, 2018
Round 1, I'm disappointed in myself. I'm from america, and I couldn't remember the White House, but I remembered Archipelago. What is wrong with me????
+4
Level 67
Nov 1, 2018
19/20. The bird on the Canadian coin stumped me. I tried the Canada Goose out of desperation.
+3
Level 55
Nov 1, 2018
I.. uh. I literally typed in every country in the world when China wouldn't work. They were asking for city. Hong Kong. I feel really stupid.
+3
Level 67
Aug 8, 2019
Pitcairn is not uninhabited, populuation of 50 as of 2018
+4
Level ∞
Aug 8, 2019
Changed the clue to say "formerly uninhabited" so there is no confusion.
+8
Level 72
Apr 3, 2021
That's clever, because every (natural) island in the world is formerly uninhabited!
+1
Level 66
Aug 30, 2023
I think that applies to man-made islands as well. I cannot be inhabitted until it first becomes an (uninhabitted) island.
+2
Level 63
Aug 30, 2023
In theory, it could be built as someone stood on it. That would be an interesting marketing approach.
+10
Level 43
Jan 18, 2020
‘Common Loon’ sounds like a really posh insult
+4
Level 99
Dec 9, 2020
When you remember the capital being Adamstown but struggle to find the island's name, despite knowing the first letter...
+1
Level 51
Dec 14, 2020
I like this series
+4
Level 73
Feb 20, 2021
what the heck are canadian coins doing in geography general knowledge quiz
+1
Level 86
Apr 3, 2021
Came here to say this also.
+1
Level 76
Aug 18, 2025
Same thing vegemite is. Anthropogeography is still geography.
+1
Level 52
Apr 3, 2021
Ugh. I misread South American mountain range as South American mountain and was just trying to guess the individual peak. Would've gotten 20/20.
+1
Level 38
Apr 4, 2021
Me too. Tried Aconcagua for 6 times haha
+1
Level 64
Apr 3, 2021
Please accept Pisa for the Leaning Tower of Pisa one
+2
Level 23
Apr 5, 2021
Spelling Deutschland is really difficult.
+3
Level 74
Aug 26, 2023
Sad German noises :'(
+4
Level 60
Apr 5, 2021
Me: "Oh I think a $1 canadian coin is called a loonie"

Me: *Doesn't guess loon*

+1
Level 58
Mar 3, 2022
the US should be counted for Marathon too, cause there is a city named that in Florida.
+1
Level 58
May 29, 2025
And a village with that name in New York.
+1
Level 60
Oct 27, 2025
Neither were named that at the time the race was named after the one in Greece.
+1
Level 56
Oct 27, 2025
This website is the place to go for silly comments, isn't it!
+1
Level 65
May 19, 2023
Should update Most populous country to India.
+2
Level 82
Oct 28, 2025
I believe that Lake Superior is an incorrect answer to the biggest freshwater lake question. Because Huron-Michigan is actually a single lake, not two, being joined together by a strait and not a river, and it is larger than Superior.