U.S. Oddities A-Z: Geography - Statistics

General Stats
  • This quiz has been taken 75 times
  • The average score is 11 of 26
Answer Stats
Hint Answer % Correct
C This Illinois city is located at the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, not the Nile. Cairo
81%
K Missouri and Tennessee each share a border with 8 other states, the most of any U.S. states. Only two states border both of them: Arkansas and ... Kentucky
79%
P While Florida, Oklahoma and Texas are the most famous states with this geographic feature, Alaska, Connecticut, Idaho, Maryland and Nebraska each also have one, and West Virginia has 2! Panhandle
72%
M In the town of Hancock, this state narrows to less than 2 miles wide, north to south. Maryland
66%
O Cimarron County in this state is the only county in the U.S. which boarders 4 other states. Oklahoma
64%
L The smallest U.S. county in terms of size and population is Kalawao County on the Hawaiian island of Moloka'i. It was developed and used from 1866 - 1969 solely to house and treat individuals suffering from this disease. Leprosy
62%
R There are two major rivers in the U.S. with this name, one flowing north between Minnesota and North Dakota, and one flowing south between Oklahoma and Texas. Red River
47%
U Excluding those named after historical figures, this is the most common county name in the United States - found in 18 states. Union
47%
Q Nickname often used to refer to the second largest city in a state. {Queen} City
42%
G Though often considered a desert state, Arizona lies only 40 miles from this arm of the Pacific Ocean. Gulf of California
40%
W The "Parting of the Waters" in this state is where North Two Ocean Creek splits into Atlantic Creek and Pacific Creek, each eventually draining into its namesake ocean. Wyoming
40%
E With no land access to the rest of the United States, Port Roberts, Washington and the Northwest Angle in Minnesota are the two most well-known of these in the U.S. Exclave
38%
Y One of the tributaries of this Wyoming river is Crazy Woman Creek. {Yellowstone} River
36%
D Only 2.4 miles (and one day) separate this "Little" Alaskan island from its "Big" Russian counterpart. Diomede
34%
F In 1785, only 7 states voted to admit this territory as the 14th state - short of the two-thirds majority required for admission. The territory was comprised of the western counties of North Carolina, which are located in present-day Tennessee. Franklin
32%
H This highest point in Iowa, which shares its name with the state nickname, was once located near a hog feeding bunker on a farm. (The building has since been torn down and the highpoint is now a lovely county park.) {Hawkeye} Point
32%
V At 60 feet above sea level, Mount Trashmore, a former landfill turned city park, is one of the highest points in this east cost resort town. (The nearby active landfill dubbed "Mount Trashmore II" is the current highest point at 145 feet above sea level.) Virginia Beach
32%
X There are only two incorporated municipalities in the U.S. starting with the letter X. Name one of them. Xenia
32%
I There are only 41 of these jurisdictions in the U.S.: Baltimore, Maryland; St. Louis, Missouri; Carson City, Nevada; and 38 others in Virginia Independent Cities
30%
T Battle "fought" between Michigan and Ohio for control of a narrow strip of land on the border of the two states. {Toledo} War
30%
S Travelling due north, south, east, or west from this Connecticut town, the first state you will enter is New York. Stamford
28%
B The highest mountains east of the Mississippi River are not in New England, but are the 6,500+ foot peaks of this mountain range in North Carolina. {Black} Mountains
26%
Z When installed in Washington D.C. in 1919, this was intended to be the initial milestone from which all road distances in the United States would be measured. {Zero} Milestone
23%
N Most of the northern boundary of Delaware was originally defined by an arc extending 12 miles from the cupola of the courthouse in this city. New Castle
21%
J Located in Dry Tortugas National Park, 70 miles west of Key West, Florida, this historic fort protected valuable shipping lanes for the U.S. in the mid-19th century, and also served as a prison for Union deserters during the Civil War. Jefferson
17%
A If not for the construction of the Old River Control Structure in 1963, the US Army Corps of Engineers calculated that this distributary of the Mississippi River in Louisiana would have captured the full flow of the Mississippi by 1990, leaving New Orleans high (or low) and dry. {Atchafalya} River
13%
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