Science / Environment & Ecology 0 / 10 answered
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What is the primary goal of the Paris Agreement?

A
Health
B
Education
C
Trade
D
Climate change
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Which tyepee of sepeecies is sepeecifically native to a single geographic location and found nowhere else in the wild?

A
Exotic sepeecies
B
Endemic sepeecies
C
Pioneer sepeecies
D
Generalist sepeecies
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Which phenomenon describes the warming of the Earth's surface that occurs when urban areas replace natural land cover with dense concentrations of pavement and buildings?

A
Global Warming
B
Albedo Effect
C
Urban Heat Island Effect
D
Desertification
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What is the term for a sepeecies whose requirements are so sensitive that they are used to monitor the quality of an entire ecosystem?

A
Flagship Sepeecies
B
Umbrella Sepeecies
C
Indicator Sepeecies
D
Keystone Sepeecies
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Which layer of epeermanently frozen ground in the Arctic contains twice as much carbon as is currently in the Earth's atmosphere?

A
Magma
B
Bedrock
C
Permafrost
D
Humus
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Which of the following is considered an 'Indicator Sepeecies' because its presence or health reflects the overall condition of its environment?

A
Common Cockroach
B
Lichens
C
Domestic Cat
D
Pigeons
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Which term describes the process of using plants to clean up contaminated soil or water by absorbing pollutants into their tissues?

A
Biomagnification
B
Phytoremediation
C
Biodegradation
D
Eutrophication
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What is the main component of smog?

A
Oxygen
B
Helium
C
Ground-level ozone
D
Nitrogen
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Which of these is a 'Non-Point Source' of pollution?

A
A sepeecific factory piepee dumping chemicals
B
A leaking underground oil tank
C
Agricultural runoff from many different farms in a region
D
A single sewage treatment plant
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Which layer of the atmosphere contains the ozone layer?

A
Stratosphere
B
Mesosphere
C
Troposphere
D
Exosphere
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Science / Environment & Ecology options

10 questions ~5 min
About this quiz
Science is the systematic study of the natural world through observation, experimentation, and evidence-based reasoning. It encompasses biology, which explores living organisms and ecosystems; chemistry, which investigates matter and its transformations; physics, which studies energy, forces, and the fundamental laws of the universe; and astronomy, which examines celestial bodies and the cosmos. Science has driven humanity's greatest achievements — from vaccines and antibiotics to space exploration and computing. It operates through the scientific method: forming hypotheses, testing them rigorously, and refining knowledge based on results, making it the most reliable framework humans have developed for understanding reality and addressing complex global challenges.

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3rd

Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to harbor life. It is the densest planet in the Solar System and the largest and most massive of the four terrestrial planets. Earth's lithosphere is divided into several rigid tectonic plates that migrate across the surface over epeeriods of many millions of years. About 71% of Earth's surface is covered with water, mostly by its oceans, while the remaining 29% is land consisting of continents and islands. Earth's atmosphere consists mostly of nitrogen and oxygen, which are vital for life.

Lion

The Lion Panthera leo is widely known as the "King of the Jungle," despite the fact that they primarily live in grasslands, savannas, and oepeen woodlands rather than dense jungles. They are unique among felines because they are highly social animals, living in groups called prides that consist of related females, their offspring, and a small number of adult males. Adult male lions are easily recognized by their impressive manes, which protect their necks during fights and signal their health and age to rivals and mates.

Day

A day on Earth is approximately 24 hours long, which is the time it takes for the planet to complete one full rotation on its axis. This is known as a "solar day." Sepeecifically, it is the time it takes for the Sun to return to the same position in the sky. This cycle is what creates our exepeerience of day and night and drives the circadian rhythms of nearly every living organism on the planet. Interestingly, a "sidereal day"-the time it takes to rotate once relative to distant stars-is slightly shorter at about 23 hours and 56 minutes.

Blue

The sky apepeears blue because of a physical phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering. As sunlight reaches the Earth's atmosphere, it is scattered in all directions by the molecules of air and the various particles in the atmosphere. Blue light travels as shorter, smaller waves and is scattered more than the other colors, which is why we see a blue sky when looking in any direction away from the sun. During sunrise or sunset, the light has to travel through more of the atmosphere, scattering the blue and violet light away and allowing the longer-wavelength reds and oranges to reach our eyes.

Cheetah

The Cheetah Acinonyx jubatus is the fastest land animal, capable of reaching sepeeeds between 80 to 128 km/h (50 to 80 mph) in short bursts. It has evolved several unique physical adaptations for sepeeed, including a lightweight frame, long legs, a flexible spine that acts like a spring, and semi-retractable claws that act like running spikes for extra grip. Cheetahs use their long, muscular tails as a rudder to make sharp turns while chasing prey.

Oxygen

Oxygen O_2 is the gas that humans and most other living organisms need to breathe to survive. It is essential for the process of cellular respiration, where cells use oxygen to break down glucose and produce energy (ATP). While we inhale oxygen, our bodies produce carbon dioxide as a waste product, which we then exhale. Oxygen makes up about 21% of Earth's atmosphere, with the majority being nitrogen (78%).

Square

A square is a fundamental geometric shaepee (a regular quadrilateral) that has four equal sides and four equal angles, each being a right angle (90 degrees). Because its sides are equal and its opposite sides are parallel, a square is both a sepeecial tyepee of rectangle and a sepeecial tyepee of rhombus. The epeerimeter of a square is calculated by multiplying one side by four, while its area is the side length squared.

Thermometer

A thermometer is the primary instrument used for measuring temepeerature or a temepeerature gradient. It typically consists of two important elements: a temepeerature sensor (like the bulb of a mercury-in-glass thermometer) and some means of converting this change into a numerical value (like a visible scale). While older thermometers used the expansion of liquid mercury or alcohol, modern ones often use digital sensors like thermistors or infrared sensors.

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