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Quiz about What is THAT Part II
Quiz about What is THAT Part II

What is THAT? Part II Trivia Quiz


I have made a machine which can combine many objects. Follow me around the lab to see which things I made. If you get most of them correct, I might offer you a souvenir!

A multiple-choice quiz by SlayerBob. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
SlayerBob
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
383,397
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Difficult
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
263
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. I have made some delicious loganberries. They are a dark red, rather than black as in their other origin fruit. What did I use to make these berries? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. I used one of my old hybrids, a liger, and a fresh male lion. Roaring with triumph was the first thing this guy did. Who is he? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. See that iguana on the sofa? It was a combination, but looks like a regular iguana. It was a cross between a marine and land iguana. What is it? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Wheat and rye make the breads in my oven. My son loves them both so I crossed them. What is the thing in my hand? Get it right, and you can try some bread made from it. Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Llamas and camels are not being bought recently. So I decided to make a hybrid out of them. What in the world did I get? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. In the front of my yard, I have a strange tree called a Meyer Lemon tree. Before you can taste the fruit, you need to tell me which trees made this masterpiece! Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. The strange green vegetable on my table there- ah, yes, the Rabbage! Do you know what it is made of? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Potato, potato, tomato, tomato. Ah, those common ones could be used for a hybrid! But what in the world did we create by mixing these two? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. I have some blood oranges on that table, if you care to eat them. But there is another there- the blood lime! What in the world made that thing? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. That tayberry over there... ah, yes, that one! Could you tell me what made it into such a fine berry? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. I have made some delicious loganberries. They are a dark red, rather than black as in their other origin fruit. What did I use to make these berries?

Answer: Blackberries and raspberries

Loganberries are good right from the garden or can also be used for juice or pies, jams, crumbles, fruit syrups, and wines. Like most other raspberry /blackberry hybrids, loganberries can be used interchangeably with both blackberries or raspberries in many recipes.
2. I used one of my old hybrids, a liger, and a fresh male lion. Roaring with triumph was the first thing this guy did. Who is he?

Answer: Liliger

Strange name indeed, but Craig Packer, University of Minnesota Lion Research center director says "In terms of conservation, it's so far away from anything, it's kind of pointless to even say it's irrelevant."
3. See that iguana on the sofa? It was a combination, but looks like a regular iguana. It was a cross between a marine and land iguana. What is it?

Answer: Hybrid iguana

These animals are dark with white specks or bands of mottling near the head.

The first hybrid iguana was discovered in 1981. In 1997, high temperatures during a severe storm killed the seaweed around the Galapagos Islands and nearly half the marine iguanas starved to death. The others came to land in search of plants to eat. They also mated with the land iguanas, which produced a number of hybrid iguanas. As of 2003, twenty had been found. German researchers discovered that the marine were the fathers and the land the mothers.
4. Wheat and rye make the breads in my oven. My son loves them both so I crossed them. What is the thing in my hand? Get it right, and you can try some bread made from it.

Answer: Triticale

The name comes from triticum and secale (wheat and rye); it was first made in Swedish and Scottish labs in the late 19th century.
5. Llamas and camels are not being bought recently. So I decided to make a hybrid out of them. What in the world did I get?

Answer: Cama

A cama comes from a male dromedary camel and a female llama, and has been produced a lot at the Camel Reproduction Center in Dubai. The first cama was born on January 14, 1998. The goal was to get an animal capable of higher wool production than the llama, with the great size and strength of the camel.
6. In the front of my yard, I have a strange tree called a Meyer Lemon tree. Before you can taste the fruit, you need to tell me which trees made this masterpiece!

Answer: Mandarin orange and true Lemon trees

The Meyer Lemon, produced by this tree, is much sweeter than a regular one and thus this tree is one of a chef's or gardener's favorites. These trees are grown outside in climates a bit hotter than zone 8, but can be grown in pots which are occasionally brought inside for colder months.
7. The strange green vegetable on my table there- ah, yes, the Rabbage! Do you know what it is made of?

Answer: Cabbage and radish

Rabbage (Brassiocoraphanus) is a cross between the two common vegetables, cabbage and radish. Soviet agronomist Georgi Dmitrievich Karpechenko successfully developed this hybrid so that it could self-propagate in the 1910s and '20s.
8. Potato, potato, tomato, tomato. Ah, those common ones could be used for a hybrid! But what in the world did we create by mixing these two?

Answer: Pomato

The pomato is good to eat raw or cooked, which is one of its best characteristics. Pomato is a fairly small fruit which looks like a tomato, and has white flesh.
9. I have some blood oranges on that table, if you care to eat them. But there is another there- the blood lime! What in the world made that thing?

Answer: Ellendale mandarin and red finger lime

Blood limes are in the world, but other bloody citrus fruits are not here yet! Limes are very sour, so the bloodiness makes them more sweet and tolerable for a regular person to eat.
10. That tayberry over there... ah, yes, that one! Could you tell me what made it into such a fine berry?

Answer: Blackberry and raspberry

During the summer of 1979, British farmers found a way to combine both raspberries and blackberries into another berry, different from the loganberry. Industrially, the berry is difficult to pick, so it will not be a part of commercial farm crops.
Source: Author SlayerBob

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