It wouldn't matter if it were asking about physical dimensions instead of mass. The Cullinan diamond was dug up at 10.1x6.35x5.9 cm, somewhat smaller than an average baby.
Or the explanation could be switched to physical dimensions instead of mass. The important thing is that the answer is the same no matter how you interpret it, so there's no need for the question to change.
The quiz should be What's heavier based on all the explanations given. Perhaps all the answers are still the same but mass and dimensions are not the same thing ;)
Had nothing to do with gluttony. He had an uncurable disease that made his body store up fluids. Over 400kg of his total weight was just extracellular fluids.
Apart from that, lovely quiz!
I accept the answer is the same, but 3 questions should be clear that they want what is heavier not bigger.
Robert Earl Hughes is the heaviest human whose weight was accurately measured, but he was 486kg so the humans still win.
“In 1000 AD”
1000AD was 1025 years ago
Besides a new born blue whale and an adult are the same size