Charter Challenge 4 (Jan 2008)

Round 3 (Grades five and six)

1st and 3rd periods. In these periods, your team will choose a category and be read ten questions for you to complete in ninety seconds. After each response, the moderator will indicate whether or not it was correct.


Bonus Category: Fractions


Please give all of these answers as fractions in lowest terms:


1. It is the probability of flipping heads with a fair coin.


answer: 1/2


2. What fraction of one foot is one inch?


answer: 1/12


3. To the nearest tenth, what fraction of the earth is covered by water?


answer: 7/10


4. It is the number of beats a dotted eighth note gets in common four-four time.


answer: 3/4 beat


5. Convert the repeating decimal 0.777 into a fraction.


answer: 7/9


6. What fraction of a century is a decade?


answer: 1/10


7. In a standard deck of 52 cards, what fraction of the cards are in the clubs suit?


answer: 1/4


8. Reduce the fraction 18 over 60 into lowest terms.


answer: 3/10


9. Since Senators serve six year terms, what fraction of Senators stand for re-election every two years?


answer: 1/3


10. What is 1/10 plus 1/5?


answer: 3/10


Bonus Category: Art terms


1. What kind of work is made by gluing materials such as paper scraps, photographs, and cloth onto paper?


answer: collage


2. What tool of an artist can have a rounded, filbert, fan, or rigger tip?


answer: lens


3. In this type of sculpture, parts are moved by air currents. It may hang from the ceiling.


answer: mobile


4. What tightly woven cloth is the surface artists paint on, or can refer to the painting itself?


answer: canvas


5. Chinese characters can be drawn using what specialized writing using thick and thin lines?


answer: calligraphy


6. What shade of green is named after its resemblance to a citrus fruit?


answer: lime green


7. Where would you find a mural?


answer: on the side of a building or a large wall (accept any underlined term)


8. What objects are made of clay hardened by firing, and might hold a plant?


answer: ceramic(s) or pottery


9. Fabergé put jewels into what kind of object that might be brought by a holiday rabbit?


answer: easter egg(s)


10. Michelangelo's David and Rodin's The Thinker are what kind of three-dimensional statues that might be created out of stone?


answer: sculpture(s)

Bonus Category: Astronomy


1. The constellations Ursa Major and Minor are also called the Big and Little what?


answer: Dipper or Bear


2. What body beyond Neptune was demoted to dwarf planet in 2006?


answer: Pluto


3. Polaris is also known by what name, indicating its position above ninety degrees latitude?


answer: the North Star


4. What comes between the Sun and Earth during a solar eclipse?


answer: the Moon


5. Phobos and Deimos are moons of what red planet?


answer: Mars


6. The corona, photosphere, and chromosphere are parts of what body?


answer: the Sun


7. How many bodies would you find in a trinary star system?


answer: 3


8. What describes the streams of dust and gas of a comet that always point away from the solar wind?


answer: tail


9. Venus' atmosphere is primarily composed of what gas which is causing a greenhouse effect?


answer: carbon dioxide or CO2


10. Quasars give off what kind of waves that are not AM or FM?


answer: radio waves


Bonus Category: Geography Glossary


1. What line is located at zero degrees latitude at the center of the Earth?


answer: the Equator


2. What liquid could you obtain from an aquifer?


answer: water


3. Florida is an example of what kind of landmass surrounded by water on three sides?


answer: peninsula


4. What kind of deep valleys are carved by rivers, such as a Grand one by the Colorado River?


answer: canyon


5. The Earth has seven of what large landmasses, including Antarctica?


answer: continent(s)


6. An archipelago is a place made up of many of what kind of landmass?


answer: island(s)


7. What is a spot in the desert where underground water allows trees to grow?


answer: oasis


8. A collection of coral is known by what name also meaning a ridge of rocks?


answer: reef


9. What term describes the highest point of a mountain?


answer: summit


10. Of north, south, east, and west, which two hemispheres include the United States?


answer: north and west

Bonus Category: The Mystery Category


All of the answers in this category are related. Solve the mystery and you'll know the answer to number ten.


1. What Philadelphia University has the Owl as its mascot, counts Bill Cosby among its alumni, and has a name suggesting a Hindu church?


answer: Temple University


2. In the bible, what box contained the Ten Commandments, a word that also names Noach's boat?


answer: the Ark of the Covenant


3. In mythology, what was the Medusa's hair made up of?


answer: snakes


4. Now a classic example of an evil person, what German leader committed suicide as Germany lost World War II?


answer: Adolf Hitler


5. In a Monty Python film, King Arthur searches for what cup taken to Britain by Joseph of Arimathea?


answer: the Holy Grail


6. This is the scientific study of past human life and culture by the examination of physical remains, such as graves, tools, and pottery.


answer: archeology


7. What actor starred in Air Force One, Firewall, and Patriot Games, and as Han Solo in Star Wars?


answer: Harrison Ford


8. The last of these efforts to capture Jerusalem was the ninth in 1271.


answer: the Crusades


9. A red fedora is worn by what evil crime boss who hides in the World, Space, and Time chased by ACME agents?


answer: Carmen Sandiego (accept either)


10. What character has been portrayed by River Phoenix, Sean Patrick Flanery, and George Hall in television and films, and went to the Temple of Doom?


answer: Professor Henry "Indiana" Jones (accept either)


[River was a young Indiana in the third film the others appeared in a 1990's TV show, The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles]

2nd period: This period contains twenty tossups worth 10 points each. When you think you know the answer, signal with your buzzer and your team will have five seconds to respond.


TOSSUPS:


1. He attempts to split his personality into good and evil parts, but this doctor soon finds himself slipping into evil uncontrollably. Who is this character by Robert Louis Stevenson, the alter-ego of Mr. Hyde?


answer: Doctor Henry Jekyll (and Mr. Hyde) (accept either underlined name)


2. It contains either four or eight gigabytes of memory and the OneTrip program was written for it before it was even available. What is this product that allows web browsing and text messaging released by Apple in Summer 2007?


answer: iPhone


3. Correct the grammar mistake in this sentence: Lizzy is the one that likes chocolate.


answer: Lizzy is the one who likes chocolate


4. Over the years, versions of this cereal have been called Marshmallow Mania, Fiesta, Bronto Bright, and Dino. What is this cereal that Barney is always stealing from Fred Flintstone, coming in cocoa and fruity kinds?


answer: Pebbles (accept: Fruity or Cocoa Pebbles)


5. What are classified as noctilucent, cirrus, stratus, and cumulus, the last of which may produce brief rain showers?


answer: cloud(s)


6. Intersections, Detours, Fast Forwards, Yields, U-Turns, and Roadblocks are some of the challenges teams face on this show. Name this CBS reality show hosted by Phil Keoghan where teams travel the world.


answer: The Amazing Race


7. At the 1908 Olympics, King Edward VII was supposed to start this event, but his doctors advised him to stay inside due to a cold. To allow the king to start the race, they moved the start 385 yards towards his castle. What is this running race that today is often 26 miles and 385 yards?


answer: the Marathon


8. A Series of Unfortunate Events: The End was what number in the series?


answer: 13 or Book the Thirteenth


9. In 1898, the United States entered into a war with what country, from which it won the Philippines and Puerto Rico, a country whose language Puerto Ricans still speak?


answer: Spain


10. If you were to draw the plus sign, how many right angles would be in your drawing?


answer: 4

11. What leader conquered Gaul in 51 A.D. and won the civil war between his army and Pompey's, but was later assassinated in the Roman Senate?


answer: Julius Caesar


12. What name is collectively given to Columbia, Brown, Dartmouth, Yale, Cornell, and others, a set of schools with high academic standards, said to have a plant growing up the sides of their buildings?


answer: Ivy League


13. Adherents pay the zakat tax, profess there is one God, fast during Ramadan, pray five times daily facing Mecca, and pilgrimage to Mecca. These are the five pillars of what Middle Eastern faith?


answer: Islam or the Muslim faith


14. What successor of Colin Powell was a leader at Stanford University before she became Secretary of State, and has a last name suggesting a grain you might eat with Chinese food?


answer: Condoleezza "Condi" Rice


15. Checkpoint Charlie was a place that people could cross between the East and West sides of what German capital city formerly divided by a wall?


answer: Berlin


16. Designed by Gutzon Borglum and located in the Black Hills, what sculpture depicts Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and George Washington?


answer: Mount Rushmore


17. Pencil and paper ready. What is the sum of the counting numbers one through six? That is to say, what is 1 plus 2, plus 3, plus 4, plus 5, plus 6?


answer: 21 [a trick here is to realize there are three pairs of seven]


18. What dust-size particles produced by male parts of a flower are carried by bees and the wind to fertilize plants?


answer: pollen grains


19. The Old form of this language was spoken in southern Scotland in the fifth century and borrowed many elements from Norse. The Middle form started around the time of the Norman invasion and was standardized by King Henry V. What is this language whose modern form is being used right now?


answer: English


20. Originally invented by South American Indians, they are made from gourds and usually played in pairs. What are these rattles filled with seeds used as a musical instrument?


answer: maraca(s)



4th period: This period contains twenty tossups worth 15 points each. When you think you know the answer, signal with your buzzer and your team will have five seconds to respond.


TOSSUPS:


1. What term describes the criminal practice of using false spam emails and websites to obtain personal information, which sounds like an angling activity done around water?


answer: phishing


2. With a Spanish name meaning "Holy Faith", it was established as part of the Mexican colony in 1515. What is this capital of New Mexico?


answer: Santa Fe


3. The “Connecticut” one of 1787 dealt with representation in the government. The “Missouri” one of 1820 allowed Maine to become a state. By what title are these agreements known, in which northern and southern states each received something they approved of?


answer: compromise


4. The Children of Hurin was compiled by his son Christopher. Who is this author of Lord of the Rings?


answer: J. R. R. Tolkien


5. What 2006 film named for a Mediterranean vegetable stew is set in the Paris restaurant of Gusteau's and is about the help Linguini gets while cooking from a rodent?


answer: Ratatouille [rat-a-TOO-ey]


6. Often heard around December, what does the Spanish phrase Feliz Navidad mean?


answer: Happy (or Merry) Christmas


7. The helix made from an S with three lines resembles a strand of RNA and is one of the recurring themes of this show along with scars and eclipses. Characters include Micah and Nikki Sanders and Noah and Claire Bennet. What is this NBC show about people who discover they have powers?


answer: Heroes


8. Using carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight to form carbohydrates, what green pigments found in plants are the site of photosynthesis?


answer: chlorophyll (accept: photosynthesis before "green")


9. Who had thirteen children, ten of whom founded tribes, and was the younger brother of Esau in the bible?


answer: Jacob


10. Pencil and paper ready. Christine can learn 6 violin pieces in 8 hours. At the same rate, how many pieces could she learn in 40 hours?


answer: 30 pieces [she learns 3/4 piece per hour]

11. What word describes pronouns such as "I", "he", "they", and "we", that go in the part of the sentence that is not the predicate?


answer: subject pronouns


12. The Romans called it Leutetia, which was built on the Left Bank Saint Genvieve Hill, and the island in the middle of the Seine. What is this French city called the "City of Lights"?


answer: Paris


13. Rajiv was Prime Minister of India from 1984 to 1989. Indira was assassinated by her Sikh [SEEK] bodyguards. What surname do these leaders share with the pacifist Mahatma?


answer: Gandhi


14. How many sides does a decagon have?


answer: 10


15. Originally it was known as Armistice Day to commemorate the end of World War I, which is the name still used in France. The British call it Remembrance Day. What is this November observance honoring those who serve in the Armed Forces?


answer: Veterans Day (accept November 11)


16. An encaustic is a painting that uses what substance found in beehives and candles?


answer: wax


17. What Seattle Mariner had the highest American League batting average in 2001 and 2004, which occurred after he left the Orix Blue Wave in Japan's Pacific League?


answer: Ichiro Suzuki


18. The Mercalli intensity scale measures the effects on the Earth's surface of one of these, and hence measures its damage. An aftershock is a smaller version of what kind of ca strophe measured by the Richter Scale in which the ground shakes?


answer: earthquake


19. His account says that he was "first a surgeon, and then a Captain of several ships". His travels into several remote nations of the world began when he shipwrecked on the island of Liliput. Who is this creation of Jonathan Swift?


answer: Lemuel Gulliver (accept either)


20. His Greek equivalent is Eros, and he may have been the son of Mars and Venus. He appears in Virgil's Aeneid changed into the shape of Ascanius to inspire Dido's love. Who is this excellent archer, said to be able to inspire romance with his bow and arrow?


answer: Cupid