Week 2 Quiz Bee Review
Wonder Why?
Feeding your curiosity, one fact at a time. Wonder Why explores the science, history, and mysteries that make our world incredible.
Expand your mind every time you scroll.
Quiz #15
Animal Wonders
This is due to the phenomenon called convergent evolution:
The "Tire Tread" Effect: Fingerprints (dermal ridges) aren’t just for ID; they act like treads on a tire. They help both humans and koalas grip smooth surfaces—like eucalyptus branches—by channeling away moisture.
High-Definition Touch: These ridges create vibrations when they move across a surface. This gives both species extreme "tactile sensitivity," helping koalas feel for the best leaves and humans handle delicate tools.
Independent Evolution: We didn't inherit these from a shared ancestor. Instead, nature "invented" the same solution twice because both species needed to climb and grasp with precision.
Yes, even under a microscope, they are very similar (loops, whorls, and arches).
Quiz #14
Nature's Mystery
Located in Chile, it's the driest place on Earth.
Quiz #13
The Mind Hack
It is the fattiest organ in the body.
Quiz #12
Space Frontier
It has over 400 active volcanoes.
Quiz #11
Hidden History
It took place in 1896 between Britain and Zanzibar.
Quiz #10
Cinema Secrets
Scanned from a Japanese sushi cookbook.
Quiz #9
Science and Safety
It isn't a chemical reaction; it’s a violent physical one. Here is the science behind the fireball:
Density: Water is heavier (denser) than oil. When you pour water on a grease fire, it instantly sinks to the bottom of the pan.
Expansion: The oil is far hotter than 100°C (water's boiling point). The water flashes into steam instantly, expanding 1,600 times its original volume.
Ejection: This massive "steam bomb" trapped at the bottom blasts the burning oil upward, out of the pan.
Combustion: Once the oil is sprayed into the air, it breaks into tiny droplets. This creates massive surface area, allowing oxygen to ignite all the oil at once, resulting in a fireball.
Week 1 Quiz Bee Review
Quiz #8
Animal Wonders
Group of crows are called a 'murder', owls are a 'parliament'.
Quiz #7
Nature's Mystery
The movement of the "Sailing Stones" is caused by a rare phenomenon called "windowpane ice."
After rare desert rain creates a shallow pond, a thin sheet of ice forms at night and shatters into large floating panels during the morning thaw.
Driven by light winds, these massive ice sheets act like slow-motion bulldozers, shoving the boulders across the slick, saturated mud.
Because the movement is incredibly slow—roughly 2 to 6 meters per minute—it is nearly invisible to the naked eye, leaving behind deep tracks once the water finally evaporates.
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