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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Another Presentation © 2001 - All rights Reserved [email protected]

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

• • • • • • • • Directions: Scroll through the presentation and enter the answers (which are really the questions) and the questions (which are really the answers).

Enter in the categories on the main game boards.

As you play the game, click on the

TEXT DOLLAR AMOUNT

contestant calls, not the surrounding box.

that the When they have given a question, click again anywhere on the screen to see the correct question. Keep track of which questions have already been picked by printing out the game board screen and checking off as you go.

Click on the “Game” box to return to the main scoreboard.

Enter the score into the black box on each players podium.

Continue until all clues are given.

When finished,

DO NOT

save the game. This will overwrite the program with the scores and data you enter. You

MAY

save it as a different name, but keep this file untouched!

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

Round 1

Round 2

Final Jeopardy

$ Ph illi p $

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Kathy

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Nature of Science Energy Transfer Classi fication Animals Plants Cells

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Round 2

Final Jeopardy

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 A type of SI unit used to measure the mass of a car

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What is a kilogram?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 An ordered method used by scientists to solve problems

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is the scientific method?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 The factor in an experiment to which no change is made

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What is a control?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 State, observe, or define the problem

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is the first part of the scientific method?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 The factor that is being tested in an experiment

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What is a variable?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 A simple feeding relationship

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What is a food chain?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Term referring to organisms that produce their own food 2

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is a producer (autotroph)?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 A diagram or chart used to explain how energy is passed from one trophic layer to the next

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What is an ecological pyramid?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 This process uses light to produce glucose and oxygen

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is photosynthesis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 Part of the cell where cellular respiration occurs

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What is the mitochondrion?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 The lowest taxonomic level

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What is species?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The most diverse, most inclusive taxonomic level

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is kingdom?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 Two-part scientific name used to classify organisms

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What is binomial nomenclature?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The first part of a scientific name

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is genus?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 Kingdom that contains organisms that are eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic and lack cell walls

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What is animal?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Used by animals to blend in with their surroundings

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What is camouflage or protective coloration?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Animals that have hair or fur and give their young milk

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What are mammals?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 The jointed-appendage animals such as insects and arachnids

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What are arthropods?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The egg-laying mammal group

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What are monotremes?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 The class of animals that has 3 chambered hearts and a “double life”

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What are amphibians?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Structure in plant cells that is used to make food

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What are chloroplasts?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The male reproductive structure in angiosperms

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is the stamen?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 The female reproductive structure in angiosperms

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What is the pistil?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Transports the “food” made by plants

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is phloem?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 Plants that produce seeds but not flowers

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What are gymnosperms?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Short hairlike or threadlike structures that are used in locomotion

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What are cilia?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Have large vacuoles, plastids, and cell walls containing cellulose

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What are plant cells?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 Cells that have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What are eukaryotic cells?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Sites of protein synthesis in cells

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What are ribosomes?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 Fluid-filled, membrane-bound structure that stores food, water and minerals

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What are vacuoles?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Cell Transport Classifi cation Cell Division Heredity Ecosys tems Matter

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Round 1

Final Jeopardy

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Types of transport that involved little or no energy

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is passive transport?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Movement of molecules from a high to low concentration

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is diffusion?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Type of diffusion that involves movement of water through a semi-permeable membrane

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What is osmosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Type of transport that requires energy

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is active transport?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Movement of materials into cells requiring energy

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is endocytosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The largest, most inclusive group in the seven order system

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is a kingdom?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The smallest, most specific group in the seven order system

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is species?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Organisms that are multicellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophic, and have no cell walls

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What is Kingdom Animalia?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Organisms that are multicellular, eukaryotic, autotrophic and have cell walls that contain cellulose

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is Kingdom Plantae?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Organisms that are multicellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophic, and have cell walls containing chitin

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is Kingdom Fungi?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Asexual reproduction

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is mitosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Produces cells for sexual reproduction

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is meiosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Produces more body cells; allows us to grow in size

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What is mitosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Cell division that produces reproductive cells which can also be called sex cells, germ cells, or gametes

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is meiosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Type of cell division that reduces the chromosome number by half

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is meiosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Shaped like a spiral ladder

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is DNA?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Pairs with adenine in the DNA molecule

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is thymine?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Pairs with guanine in the DNA molecule

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What is cytosine?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Makes up the “rungs” of the DNA ladder

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What are the nitrogen containing bases?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Makes up the outside part of the DNA ladder (Sometimes called its backbone)

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is sugar and phosphorus?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Factors in an ecosystem that are nonliving

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What are abiotic factors?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The living factors in ecosystems

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What are biotic factors?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 The organisms of decay in ecosystems such as bacteria and fungi

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What are decomposers? (saprophytes)

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Another name for alien, non native, or introduced species such as kudzu

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What are exotic species?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Term referring to any relationship where 2 or more species live together

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is symbiosis?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Density =_____/Volume

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is mass?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Term referring to substances that have a definite shape and volume

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What are solids?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Substances that have no definite shape nor volume

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What are liquids?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Temperature, concentration of a solution, surface area

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What are factors that affect rates of chemical change?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Helium, neon, and argon are examples of theses gases whose outermost energy level is filled

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What are noble gases?

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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Animals

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Final Jeopary Question

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Term referring to a nonpoisonous animal that resembles a poisonous one

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved What is mimicry?

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