50 Geography Questions That Get Progressively Harder
I have 50 geography questions that hopefully you can get! Each question will statistically get harder! If you think I should change anything, please comment!
If you have any suggestions, please tell them in the comments!
Spell check: Tanganyika. Why doesn't simply "Congo" work for the river crossing the Equator? Why is not Seychelles also a correct answer for the country with a common female name as its capital?
This is a technicality, the Aleutian Islands stretch beyond the international date line which technically makes it the most eastern state. Hope this helps!
You should accept "Chimborazo" for mt. Chimborazo, "Pacific" for the Pacific plate, "Arabian" for the Arabian desert and "equatoguinean" for equatoguineanS. I entered all 4 but gave up on them when they didn't work. Plus I would accept "Puget" for Puget Sound, "Grand" for Rio Grande and perhaps just "Challenger" for Challenger deep.
Thank you for spotting this! I believe I made that question when Nusantara was supposed to become the new capital but it never went through, and I guess I never changed it! Thank you again!
The flag of Malta has two animals on it. St George is mounted on a horse and is slaying a dragon. Perhaps "Which mythical animal is found on the flag of Malta?"
Yeah. I like your wording of "mythical animal!" Another possibility (which is what I had in mind) would be to explicitly exclude the horse, i.e.: something along the lines of "Other than a horse, what other (mythical) animal is depicted on the flag of Malta?"
So, just looking around, I think the US misses the mark. Unless I'm missing something, there isn't anything in the southeast quarter, the one where Australia is. But the UK does have something in each. The island of Great Britain straddles the prime meridian, putting land in both northern quarters, then the British Indian Ocean Territory is in the southeast, and the Falklands, along with other territories, are in the southwest.
could include France as being in 4 hemispheres. Metropolitan France is on both sides of the Greenwich Meridian and is in the northern hemisphere. Tahiti is south west and Reunion is South east.
There is no natural boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space. By convention the Karman line is used, which is 100km above sea level by definition. By this metric, the tallest mountain above sea level (Everest) is also closest to space.
However, it is true that Chimborazo is furthest from Earth's center, because of the equatorial bulge.
You are half right with that but saying the lowest point is the mariana trench is like saying the himalayan mountains are the highest point, you’re not wrong it’s just a more broad answer. I might accept it, just i think it’s not specific enough.
Great quiz. I’m not sure about Guangzhou/Shenzhen. Most sources say Tokyo for the largest city. Guangzhou/Shenzhen only becomes larger if you consider the large metropolitan area it connects to - and yes it is the largest ‘urban agglomeration’ but not sure this is the same as ‘a’ city. Maybe if you said largest populated area?
you’re right, i did phrase it kind of wrong just if you do a jetpunk largest city quiz, you find guangzhou/shenzhen as the largest, but i do agree it’s slightly confusing.
I totally agree with you, I originally made this just a regular quiz and reordered it in difficulty, but over time the stats have changed a bit, once I have time I will totally go over this! Thank you!
If you do that, as I presume the quiz-maker intended, then Kiribati is the only answer. However if you don't, then the UK does indeed qualify.
It might be helpful to include this qualifier either in the wording of that question, or in the quiz description.
However, it is true that Chimborazo is furthest from Earth's center, because of the equatorial bulge.
Thanks for the quiz.