Welcome to National Park Week Quiz #3! When correctly interpreted, each of the following phrases reveals the identity of a National Park System unit. Identify any 10 of these 13 national parks before 12:00 midnight EST today and you will be eligible for Traveler’s National Park Week prize drawing and a chance to win a National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map for the national park of your choice.
prismatic span
stone brook
howling canine bunker
glittering fastener
large perforation
cattle containers
princess-botherer crest
royal peak
explorer's classic ride
stylized piles
deprivation indication
tube leap
loose garment food fish
Answers and a list of readers who answered correctly will be posted in tomorrow's Traveler.
No cheating!
If we catch you Googling or engaged in other sneakery, we’ll make you write on the whiteboard 100 times:
Hadrons, which are composite particles made of quarks held together by the strong force, are categorized as either baryons (three quarks) or mesons (one quark and one antiquark). Scientists suspect that there are other kinds of hadrons, such as tetraquarks (exotic mesons) and pentaquarks (exotic baryons), but there is no conclusive proof.
Comments
Congrats to EEW who first managed to successfully negotiate this time-consuming quiz, and to celbert who checked in 45 minutes later with enough correct answers to join EEW.
Almost perfect, EEW. I'll forgive you that wayward apostrophe and welcome you to the winners circle. You can use the front entrance.
Celbert, you can use the front entrance this time.
Congratulations, OutInTheStiks. Two of your guesses were pretty wide of the mark, but 10 were right on the button.
Incidentally, you're going to feel sheepish when you see the solution for the one you left blank. ;o)
Only nine out of ten, toothdoctor. I'm afraid I'm going to have to leave it to you to figure out which one is defective.
"princess-botherer"? I can't find that term in my Webster's dictionary....
Oh wait! Are we allowed to use a dictionary? Or is that included in the prohibited "sneakery"?
I've never bothered to define "sneakery," viewmtn. I suppose you could say that it's anything that involves an unfair advantage. Anyway, it appears that using a dictionary doesn't provide you with any advantage at all. ;o)