• QFTCICR25 Game 7, Rounds 7-8: CanGeo, old units

    From msb@msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) to rec.games.trivia on Mon Jun 8 18:53:08 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-11-03,
    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 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    3. In which *two* provinces or territories is the World Heritage
    Site of Pimachiowin Aki located?

    4. Which of the World Heritage Sites in Canada was the most recently
    added, in 2023, to the UNESCO list?

    5. There are eight triplicate names of cities or towns in Canada,
    i.e. places that share their name with two other Canadian cities
    or towns. Give *any one* of these triplicated names. You don't
    have to identify the provinces or territories they're in.

    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    7. Which lake has the largest area of Canadaian waters? That is,
    for lakes along the Canada-US border, only rhw Canadian part
    is counted.

    8. What river has the greatest length inside Canada?

    9. What body of water does <answer 8> empty into? Name the specific
    marginal sea, gulf, etc. if applicable -- e.g. the Potomac
    empties into Chesapeake Bay, not the Atlantic Ocean.

    10. Which Canadian lake's bottom is the deepest in relation to
    sea level in all of North America?


    * Game 7, Round 8 - Science -- Obsolete Units of Measurement

    Although the Magna Carta decreed "Let there be one measure", for
    centuries the British Imperial system of measurement struggled
    with a bewildering variety of terms and with, ah, interesting
    multiples being used to transition between smaller and larger units.
    This round deals with various units of measurement that are not
    part of the metric system.

    In that standardized Imperial system...

    1. ...how many links were in a chain?
    2. ...how many rods were in a chain?
    3. ...how many chains were in a furlong?
    4. ...and how many furlongs were in a mile?

    5. Up to the 14th century, the unit of weight referred to as a
    "stone" varied from 4 to 32 pounds and was based on whatever
    good-sized rock was available to serve as a standard weight
    for the local market. In the 14th century, the weight of a
    "stone" was standardized. Following the standardization,
    how many pounds were in a stone?

    6. The cubit, used by ancient civilizations and in the Middle
    Ages, did not have a standard length but was defined instead
    by the distance between two points on the human body. What two
    points?

    7. In addition to being a type of creature in Middle Earth, a
    "hobbit" was also a unit of measurement of volume in Wales.
    How many bushels were in a hobbit?

    8. And how many pecks were in a bushel?

    Finally, there's the Apothecaries' system of measurement. In that system...

    9. ...how many drams were in an ounce?
    10. ...and how many scruples were in a dram?
    --
    Mark Brader, Toronto | "Not impossible, so that makes it possible." msb@vex.net | --Eve Dallas (Nora Roberts as J.D. Robb)

    My text in this article is in the public domain.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dan Tilque@dtilque@frontier.com to rec.games.trivia on Mon Jun 8 12:39:34 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    On 6/8/26 11:53, Mark Brader wrote:


    * Game 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    Paris, Ontario, France


    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    Ontario


    3. In which *two* provinces or territories is the World Heritage
    Site of Pimachiowin Aki located?

    4. Which of the World Heritage Sites in Canada was the most recently
    added, in 2023, to the UNESCO list?

    5. There are eight triplicate names of cities or towns in Canada,
    i.e. places that share their name with two other Canadian cities
    or towns. Give *any one* of these triplicated names. You don't
    have to identify the provinces or territories they're in.

    Fairview


    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    5th


    7. Which lake has the largest area of Canadaian waters? That is,
    for lakes along the Canada-US border, only rhw Canadian part
    is counted.

    Huron


    8. What river has the greatest length inside Canada?

    Mackenzie


    9. What body of water does <answer 8> empty into? Name the specific
    marginal sea, gulf, etc. if applicable -- e.g. the Potomac
    empties into Chesapeake Bay, not the Atlantic Ocean.

    Beaufort Sea


    10. Which Canadian lake's bottom is the deepest in relation to
    sea level in all of North America?

    Great Slave Lake



    * Game 7, Round 8 - Science -- Obsolete Units of Measurement

    Although the Magna Carta decreed "Let there be one measure", for
    centuries the British Imperial system of measurement struggled
    with a bewildering variety of terms and with, ah, interesting
    multiples being used to transition between smaller and larger units.
    This round deals with various units of measurement that are not
    part of the metric system.

    In that standardized Imperial system...

    1. ...how many links were in a chain?

    12

    2. ...how many rods were in a chain?

    10

    3. ...how many chains were in a furlong?

    6; 12

    4. ...and how many furlongs were in a mile?

    8


    5. Up to the 14th century, the unit of weight referred to as a
    "stone" varied from 4 to 32 pounds and was based on whatever
    good-sized rock was available to serve as a standard weight
    for the local market. In the 14th century, the weight of a
    "stone" was standardized. Following the standardization,
    how many pounds were in a stone?

    14


    6. The cubit, used by ancient civilizations and in the Middle
    Ages, did not have a standard length but was defined instead
    by the distance between two points on the human body. What two
    points?

    nose and tip of the middle finger (extended arm)


    7. In addition to being a type of creature in Middle Earth, a
    "hobbit" was also a unit of measurement of volume in Wales.
    How many bushels were in a hobbit?

    8. And how many pecks were in a bushel?

    4


    Finally, there's the Apothecaries' system of measurement. In that system...

    9. ...how many drams were in an ounce?

    8

    10. ...and how many scruples were in a dram?

    3
    --
    Dan Tilque
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Pete Gayde@pete.gayde@gmail.com to rec.games.trivia on Mon Jun 8 15:29:14 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    Mark Brader wrote:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-11-03,
    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 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    Quebec; British Columbia


    3. In which *two* provinces or territories is the World Heritage
    Site of Pimachiowin Aki located?

    4. Which of the World Heritage Sites in Canada was the most recently
    added, in 2023, to the UNESCO list?

    5. There are eight triplicate names of cities or towns in Canada,
    i.e. places that share their name with two other Canadian cities
    or towns. Give *any one* of these triplicated names. You don't
    have to identify the provinces or territories they're in.

    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    7. Which lake has the largest area of Canadaian waters? That is,
    for lakes along the Canada-US border, only rhw Canadian part
    is counted.

    8. What river has the greatest length inside Canada?

    McKenzie


    9. What body of water does <answer 8> empty into? Name the specific
    marginal sea, gulf, etc. if applicable -- e.g. the Potomac
    empties into Chesapeake Bay, not the Atlantic Ocean.

    10. Which Canadian lake's bottom is the deepest in relation to
    sea level in all of North America?


    * Game 7, Round 8 - Science -- Obsolete Units of Measurement

    Although the Magna Carta decreed "Let there be one measure", for
    centuries the British Imperial system of measurement struggled
    with a bewildering variety of terms and with, ah, interesting
    multiples being used to transition between smaller and larger units.
    This round deals with various units of measurement that are not
    part of the metric system.

    In that standardized Imperial system...

    1. ...how many links were in a chain?
    2. ...how many rods were in a chain?
    3. ...how many chains were in a furlong?
    4. ...and how many furlongs were in a mile?

    8


    5. Up to the 14th century, the unit of weight referred to as a
    "stone" varied from 4 to 32 pounds and was based on whatever
    good-sized rock was available to serve as a standard weight
    for the local market. In the 14th century, the weight of a
    "stone" was standardized. Following the standardization,
    how many pounds were in a stone?

    20


    6. The cubit, used by ancient civilizations and in the Middle
    Ages, did not have a standard length but was defined instead
    by the distance between two points on the human body. What two
    points?

    Tips of middle fingers when arms are outstretched


    7. In addition to being a type of creature in Middle Earth, a
    "hobbit" was also a unit of measurement of volume in Wales.
    How many bushels were in a hobbit?

    8. And how many pecks were in a bushel?

    Finally, there's the Apothecaries' system of measurement. In that system...

    9. ...how many drams were in an ounce?
    10. ...and how many scruples were in a dram?


    Pete Gayde
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Erland Sommarskog@esquel@sommarskog.se to rec.games.trivia on Mon Jun 8 22:37:24 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    Mark Brader (msb@vex.net) writes:
    * Game 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    Dublin, Ireland

    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    Ontario

    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    8

    8. What river has the greatest length inside Canada?

    Fraser

    9. What body of water does <answer 8> empty into? Name the specific
    marginal sea, gulf, etc. if applicable -- e.g. the Potomac
    empties into Chesapeake Bay, not the Atlantic Ocean.

    Juan de Foca Strait

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From tool@tool@panix.com (Dan Blum) to rec.games.trivia on Tue Jun 9 02:32:03 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    Mark Brader <msb@vex.net> wrote:

    * Game 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    Kingston, Jamaica

    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    Quebec

    3. In which *two* provinces or territories is the World Heritage
    Site of Pimachiowin Aki located?

    Quebec and Nunavut

    5. There are eight triplicate names of cities or towns in Canada,
    i.e. places that share their name with two other Canadian cities
    or towns. Give *any one* of these triplicated names. You don't
    have to identify the provinces or territories they're in.

    Victoria

    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    6

    7. Which lake has the largest area of Canadaian waters? That is,
    for lakes along the Canada-US border, only rhw Canadian part
    is counted.

    Superior

    8. What river has the greatest length inside Canada?

    Mackenzie

    * Game 7, Round 8 - Science -- Obsolete Units of Measurement

    1. ...how many links were in a chain?

    6; 7

    2. ...how many rods were in a chain?

    7; 11

    3. ...how many chains were in a furlong?

    6; 8

    4. ...and how many furlongs were in a mile?

    11; 16

    5. Up to the 14th century, the unit of weight referred to as a
    "stone" varied from 4 to 32 pounds and was based on whatever
    good-sized rock was available to serve as a standard weight
    for the local market. In the 14th century, the weight of a
    "stone" was standardized. Following the standardization,
    how many pounds were in a stone?

    16

    6. The cubit, used by ancient civilizations and in the Middle
    Ages, did not have a standard length but was defined instead
    by the distance between two points on the human body. What two
    points?

    tip of the index finger to shoulder

    7. In addition to being a type of creature in Middle Earth, a
    "hobbit" was also a unit of measurement of volume in Wales.
    How many bushels were in a hobbit?

    3; 4

    8. And how many pecks were in a bushel?

    4

    9. ...how many drams were in an ounce?

    12; 14

    10. ...and how many scruples were in a dram?

    8; 12
    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    Dan Blum tool@panix.com
    "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Joshua Kreitzer@gromit82@hotmail.com to rec.games.trivia on Mon Jun 8 23:14:54 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    On 6/8/2026 1:53 PM, Mark Brader wrote:

    * Game 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    Dublin, Ireland

    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    Quebec

    3. In which *two* provinces or territories is the World Heritage
    Site of Pimachiowin Aki located?

    British Columbia and Yukon; Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador

    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    7th; 8th

    7. Which lake has the largest area of Canadaian waters? That is,
    for lakes along the Canada-US border, only rhw Canadian part
    is counted.

    Lake Superior; Great Slave Lake

    * Game 7, Round 8 - Science -- Obsolete Units of Measurement

    Although the Magna Carta decreed "Let there be one measure", for
    centuries the British Imperial system of measurement struggled
    with a bewildering variety of terms and with, ah, interesting
    multiples being used to transition between smaller and larger units.
    This round deals with various units of measurement that are not
    part of the metric system.

    In that standardized Imperial system...

    4. ...and how many furlongs were in a mile?

    8

    5. Up to the 14th century, the unit of weight referred to as a
    "stone" varied from 4 to 32 pounds and was based on whatever
    good-sized rock was available to serve as a standard weight
    for the local market. In the 14th century, the weight of a
    "stone" was standardized. Following the standardization,
    how many pounds were in a stone?

    14 pounds

    6. The cubit, used by ancient civilizations and in the Middle
    Ages, did not have a standard length but was defined instead
    by the distance between two points on the human body. What two
    points?

    fingertip and elbow

    7. In addition to being a type of creature in Middle Earth, a
    "hobbit" was also a unit of measurement of volume in Wales.
    How many bushels were in a hobbit?

    4; 8

    8. And how many pecks were in a bushel?

    4

    --
    Joshua Kreitzer
    gromit82@hotmail.com
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From msb@msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) to rec.games.trivia on Thu Jun 11 23:10:30 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.video.arcade.co

    Mark Brader:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2025-11-03,
    and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
    please see my 2026-03-10 companion posting on "Questions from the
    Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


    * Game 7, Round 7 - Canadian Geography

    1. Four capitals of other countries have the same name as a Canadian
    city; for example, London, UK, and London, Ontario. Name *any
    one* of the other three, including the country name.

    Kingston (Ontario), Jamaica; St. John's (Newfoundland & Labrador),
    Antigua & Barbuda; Victoria (BC), Seychelles. 4 for Dan Blum.

    Paris, France, is wrong -- Paris, Ontario, is now unincorporated
    and was never a city anyway. (It surprised me.) eThe same applies
    to Dublin. Hamilton (Ontario), Bermuda, was accepted in the original
    game, but is wrong because Bermuda is not a country.

    2. The World Heritage Sites recognized by UNESCO include 22 in
    Canada. Which province or territory has the most World
    Heritage Sites?

    Alberta (with 5; next is Newfoundland & Labrador with 4).

    3. In which *two* provinces or territories is the World Heritage
    Site of Pimachiowin Aki located?

    Ontario, Manitoba.

    It incorporates Ontario's Woodland Caribou Provincial Park and
    Manitoba's Atikaki Provincial Park.

    4. Which of the World Heritage Sites in Canada was the most recently
    added, in 2023, to the UNESCO list?

    Anticosti Island (Quebec).

    5. There are eight triplicate names of cities or towns in Canada,
    i.e. places that share their name with two other Canadian cities
    or towns. Give *any one* of these triplicated names. You don't
    have to identify the provinces or territories they're in.

    Borden (ON, PE, SK); Beaumont (AB, NL, QC); Princeton (BC, NL, ON);
    Richmond (BC, ON, QC); Stratford (ON, PE, QC); Trout Lake (AB, BC,
    NT); Victoria (BC, NL, ON); Windsor (NS, ON, QC). 4 for Dan Blum.

    6. Of islands in Canada, Vancouver Island ranks #2 by population
    (after Montreal Island), but where does it rank by area, within
    1 place?

    #11 (accepting $10-#12).

    The top 10 are Baffin, Victoria, Ellesmere, Newfoundland, Banks,
    Devon, Axel Helberg, Melville, Southampton, and Prince of Wales
    Islands -- all in or near the Arctic Ocean except Newfoundland.

    7. Which lake has the largest area of Canadaian waters? That is,
    for lakes along the Canada-US border, only rhw Canadian part
    is counted.

    Huron. 4 for Dan Tilque.

    8. What river has the greatest length inside Canada?

    Mackenzie R. 4 for Dan Tilque, Pete, and Dan Blum.

    9. What body of water does <answer 8> empty into? Name the specific
    marginal sea, gulf, etc. if applicable -- e.g. the Potomac
    empties into Chesapeake Bay, not the Atlantic Ocean.

    Beaufort Sea. 4 for Dan Tilque.

    10. Which Canadian lake's bottom is the deepest in relation to
    sea level in all of North America?

    Great Slave Lake (-458 m or -1,502 ft.). 4 for Dan Tilque.


    * Game 7, Round 8 - Science -- Obsolete Units of Measurement

    Although the Magna Carta decreed "Let there be one measure", for
    centuries the British Imperial system of measurement struggled
    with a bewildering variety of terms and with, ah, interesting
    multiples being used to transition between smaller and larger units.
    This round deals with various units of measurement that are not
    part of the metric system.

    In the original game, this was the hardest round in the game and
    ties for 4th-hardest in the entire season with the "rare dog
    breeds" round in Game 3.

    In that standardized Imperial system...

    1. ...how many links were in a chain?

    100.

    2. ...how many rods were in a chain?

    4.

    3. ...how many chains were in a furlong?

    10.

    4. ...and how many furlongs were in a mile?

    8. 4 for Dan Tilque, Pete, and Joshua.

    5. Up to the 14th century, the unit of weight referred to as a
    "stone" varied from 4 to 32 pounds and was based on whatever
    good-sized rock was available to serve as a standard weight
    for the local market. In the 14th century, the weight of a
    "stone" was standardized. Following the standardization,
    how many pounds were in a stone?

    14. 4 for Dan Tilque and Joshua.

    6. The cubit, used by ancient civilizations and in the Middle
    Ages, did not have a standard length but was defined instead
    by the distance between two points on the human body. What two
    points?

    Elbow, tip of the middle finger. 4 for Joshua.

    7. In addition to being a type of creature in Middle Earth, a
    "hobbit" was also a unit of measurement of volume in Wales.
    How many bushels were in a hobbit?

    2+.

    8. And how many pecks were in a bushel?

    4. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, and Joshua.

    Finally, there's the Apothecaries' system of measurement. In that system...

    9. ...how many drams were in an ounce?

    8. 4 for Dan Tilque.

    10. ...and how many scruples were in a dram?

    3. 4 for Dan Tilque.


    Scores, if there are no errors:

    GAME 7 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 BEST
    TOPICS-> Ent Mis Lit Aud His Can Sci FIVE
    Joshua Kreitzer 24 16 40 36 30 0 16 146
    Dan Blum 24 8 40 0 32 12 4 116
    Dan Tilque 8 4 20 0 28 16 20 92
    Pete Gayde 8 0 12 0 24 4 4 52
    Erland Sommarskog -- -- 3 7 24 0 0 34
    --
    Mark Brader "Computers get paid to extract relevant
    Toronto information from files; people should not
    msb@vex.net have to do such mundane tasks." -- Ian Darwin

    My text in this article is in the public domain.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2