• QFTCICR25 Game 8, Rounds 9-10: boats and Guinness records

    From msb@msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) to rec.games.trivia on Sun Jun 28 03:24:28 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-11-10,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Cellar Rats, and are
    used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
    been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of
    current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2026-03-10
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    ** Game 8, Round 9 - History -- Famous Ships or Boats

    We'll describe a famous ship or boat to you, and you'll tell us
    its name.

    1. A revolt on this slave ship gave rise to a legal case that
    reached the US Supreme Court, and that was the basis for a
    movie starring Anthony Hopkins.

    2. This aid ship, the flagship of a flotilla trying to deliver aid
    to Gaza, set sail from Sicily in June 2025 and was intercepted by
    the Israeli Navy when it entered Israeli waters. Its passengers,
    including Greta Thunberg and Rami Hassan, were deported back
    to Europe.

    3. This Canadian icebreaker was the first North American surface
    vessel to reach the North.

    4. This ship was the White Star Liner built after the Titanic.
    It was originally to be a passenger ship, but became a hospital
    ship in 1915, and sank in 1916.

    5. The raft built by Thor Heyerdahl to demonstrate that primitive
    boat-building techniques could have allowed ancient people to
    cross the Pacific Ocean from South America to Polynesia.

    6. This Greenpeace ship was sunk in New Zealand by French agents
    after it had participated in protests against French nuclear
    tests in the South Pacific.

    7. The American racing yacht that, in 1983, lost the America's
    Cup to Australia, the first time that the New York Yacht Club
    lost the America's Cup race.

    8. This oil tanker sank near Nantucket Island in 1953, creating
    one of the largest oil spills in history.

    9. Before the Suez Canal opened in 1869, ships carrying the new tea
    crop from India and the Far East raced around the Cape of Good
    Hope, hoping to be the first to land their cargo and command
    high prices. This ship was one of the last British clipper
    ships to be built, and one of the fastest. It also lends its
    name to a brand of whisky.

    10. This deep-sea drilling ship was built by the Hughes Corp. and
    was used for Project Azorian, a CIA covert operation to salvage
    the sunken Soviet submarine K-129 in 1974.


    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge - Guinness Book of Records

    If any of the answers have changed since the original game, you must
    give the new answer.

    * A: Science - Scientific Records

    A1. On what space mission did men travel the greatest distance
    from the Earth?

    A2. The element oganesson currently holds the record for
    the element with the greatest atomic number, namely 118.
    It was first artificially synthesized in 2005, with a
    total of 5 atoms created to date. It is in group 18 of the
    periodic table sharing with elements such as argon and xenon.
    What name is this group more commonly referred to by?


    * B: History - Battle Records

    B1. The shortest war in history happened in 1896 and
    is considered to have lasted between 38 and 45 minutes.
    The conflict was between British forces and a sultanate
    based on an island off Africa. Which island?

    B2. Lasting approximately 10 months, which battle in history is
    considered the longest with sustained and continuous fighting
    over the duration of the battle?


    * C: Geography: Geographical Records

    C1. Pe+<n de Volez de la Gomera is in North Africa. It has
    an international boundary 85 m long, representing the
    smallest international boundary in the world. Name *either
    of the two* countries meeting there.

    C2. The longest non-stop commercial flight was 15,332 km long,
    but this has been overcome by another flight that took 19
    hours and 20 minutes in the past week. Name *any one of
    the three cities* served by these two flights.


    * D: Entertainment: Movie Records

    D1. Which movie featured the most extras?

    D2. With nine in total, which actor has the most nominations
    in Both Actor and Best Supporting Actor for the BAFTA
    (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) awards?


    * E: Sports: Olympics Games

    E1. To the nearest whole inch within 2 inches, by what margin
    did Bob Beamon increase the world record for the long jump
    at the Mexico City Olympics in 1968?

    E2. At the 2024 Olympics, the US/Swedish athlete Armand Duplantis
    (Mondo) set a record of 6.25 m (20'6") in which sport?


    * F: Miscellaneous: National Anthems

    F1. At 6 minutes, which country has the longest official
    national anthem by duration?

    F2. What country has the world's shortest national anthem?
    --
    Mark Brader | "...[The] SmartTrack plan remains in the works
    Toronto | despite exhibiting no evidence of smarts or
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    My text in this article is in the public domain.
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  • From tool@tool@panix.com (Dan Blum) to rec.games.trivia on Sun Jun 28 14:44:28 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.trivia

    Mark Brader <msb@vex.net> wrote:

    ** Game 8, Round 9 - History -- Famous Ships or Boats

    1. A revolt on this slave ship gave rise to a legal case that
    reached the US Supreme Court, and that was the basis for a
    movie starring Anthony Hopkins.

    Amistad

    4. This ship was the White Star Liner built after the Titanic.
    It was originally to be a passenger ship, but became a hospital
    ship in 1915, and sank in 1916.

    Britannic

    5. The raft built by Thor Heyerdahl to demonstrate that primitive
    boat-building techniques could have allowed ancient people to
    cross the Pacific Ocean from South America to Polynesia.

    Kon-Tiki

    6. This Greenpeace ship was sunk in New Zealand by French agents
    after it had participated in protests against French nuclear
    tests in the South Pacific.

    Rainbow Warrior

    9. Before the Suez Canal opened in 1869, ships carrying the new tea
    crop from India and the Far East raced around the Cape of Good
    Hope, hoping to be the first to land their cargo and command
    high prices. This ship was one of the last British clipper
    ships to be built, and one of the fastest. It also lends its
    name to a brand of whisky.

    Cutty Sark

    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge - Guinness Book of Records

    * A: Science - Scientific Records

    A1. On what space mission did men travel the greatest distance
    from the Earth?

    Apollo 13

    A2. The element oganesson currently holds the record for
    the element with the greatest atomic number, namely 118.
    It was first artificially synthesized in 2005, with a
    total of 5 atoms created to date. It is in group 18 of the
    periodic table sharing with elements such as argon and xenon.
    What name is this group more commonly referred to by?

    noble gases

    * B: History - Battle Records

    B1. The shortest war in history happened in 1896 and
    is considered to have lasted between 38 and 45 minutes.
    The conflict was between British forces and a sultanate
    based on an island off Africa. Which island?

    Zanzibar

    B2. Lasting approximately 10 months, which battle in history is
    considered the longest with sustained and continuous fighting
    over the duration of the battle?

    Stalingrad

    * C: Geography: Geographical Records

    C1. Pe??n de V?lez de la Gomera is in North Africa. It has
    an international boundary 85 m long, representing the
    smallest international boundary in the world. Name *either
    of the two* countries meeting there.

    Sao Tome e Principe

    C2. The longest non-stop commercial flight was 15,332 km long,
    but this has been overcome by another flight that took 19
    hours and 20 minutes in the past week. Name *any one of
    the three cities* served by these two flights.

    Sydney

    * D: Entertainment: Movie Records

    D2. With nine in total, which actor has the most nominations
    in Both Actor and Best Supporting Actor for the BAFTA
    (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) awards?

    John Gielgud; Laurence Olivier

    * E: Sports: Olympics Games

    E1. To the nearest whole inch within 2 inches, by what margin
    did Bob Beamon increase the world record for the long jump
    at the Mexico City Olympics in 1968?

    4 inches; 8 inches

    E2. At the 2024 Olympics, the US/Swedish athlete Armand Duplantis
    (Mondo) set a record of 6.25 m (20'6") in which sport?

    pole vault
    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    Dan Blum tool@panix.com
    "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
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