# | The only remaining chemical element... | Element | % Correct |
---|---|---|---|
50 | To have only three letters in its name | Tin | 93%
|
29 | To be found in bronze | Copper | 89%
|
1 | To have a stable isotope with no neutrons | Hydrogen | 86%
|
36 | To have a name that starts with the letter K | Krypton | 82%
|
80 | To be a liquid at room temperature | Mercury | 82%
|
8 | To be found in rust | Oxygen | 82%
|
2 | To be found in abundance in stars | Helium | 79%
|
26 | To have a historical "age" named after it | Iron | 79%
|
47 | To have an Olympic medal made from it | Silver | 75%
|
11 | To be found in table salt | Sodium | 75%
|
98 | To be named after a US state | Californium | 71%
|
79 | To be a metal and not be gray in its pure form | Gold | 71%
|
7 | To make up more than 1% of air | Nitrogen | 71%
|
94 | To be widely used in nuclear weapons | Plutonium | 71%
|
86 | To be a noble gas | Radon | 68%
|
14 | To be a major component of sand | Silicon | 64%
|
20 | To be found in chalk | Calcium | 61%
|
6 | To make up more than 0.1% of the universe | Carbon | 61%
|
31 | To have a name that starts with G | Gallium | 61%
|
3 | To have been formed during the Big Bang | Lithium | 61%
|
28 | To be used in a currently circulating US coin | Nickel | 61%
|
90 | To be named after a Norse god | Thorium | 61%
|
35 | To be red in its pure form | Bromine | 57%
|
63 | To be named after a continent | Europium | 57%
|
30 | To be found in brass | Zinc | 57%
|
40 | To have a name that starts with Z | Zirconium | 57%
|
95 | To be named after a location in the Western Hemisphere | Americium | 54%
|
18 | To not react with anything | Argon | 54%
|
17 | To be green in its pure form | Chlorine | 54%
|
15 | To be found in DNA | Phosphorus | 54%
|
19 | To burn lilac in a flame test | Potassium | 54%
|
16 | To be found in protein | Sulfur | 54%
|
92 | To be radioactive but occur naturally in non-trace amounts | Uranium | 54%
|
83 | To be found in Pepto-Bismol | Bismuth | 50%
|
115 | To be named after a city in Russia | Moscovium | 50%
|
10 | To be lighter than air | Neon | 50%
|
74 | To be found in a light bulb's filament | Tungsten | 50%
|
70 | To have a name that starts with Y | Ytterbium | 50%
|
97 | To be named after a university | Berkelium | 46%
|
4 | To have only two electron shells | Beryllium | 46%
|
9 | To be a gas | Fluorine | 46%
|
118 | To have a half life shorter than 100 milliseconds | Oganesson | 46%
|
85 | To be a halogen | Astatine | 43%
|
117 | To be discovered after 2007 | Tennessine | 43%
|
65 | To be named after Ytterby, Sweden | Terbium | 43%
|
22 | To be stronger than stainless steel (specific strength 63.1 kN·m/kg) | Titanium | 43%
|
13 | To make up more than 5% of Earth's crust | Aluminum | 39%
|
5 | To be harder than topaz in its pure form (Mohs hardness 8) | Boron | 39%
|
24 | To be a major component of stainless steel | Chromium | 39%
|
96 | To be named after two different people | Curium | 39%
|
99 | To be named after someone born in Germany | Einsteinium | 39%
|
32 | To have an atomic number that is a power of two | Germanium | 39%
|
53 | To be diatomic | Iodine | 39%
|
12 | To have an atomic mass less than 40 | Magnesium | 39%
|
88 | To have been discovered by Marie Curie | Radium | 39%
|
54 | To have 8 or more naturally occurring isotopes | Xenon | 39%
|
89 | To have a row named after itself on the period table | Actinium | 36%
|
68 | To have a name that starts with a vowel | Erbium | 36%
|
82 | To be discovered before 3000 BC | Lead | 36%
|
109 | To be named after a (non-mythological) woman | Meitnerium | 36%
|
33 | To have been discovered in antiquity | Arsenic | 32%
|
25 | To have a name that doesn't end in -um | Manganese | 32%
|
111 | To be in group 11 | Roentgenium | 32%
|
37 | To be an alkali metal | Rubidium | 32%
|
34 | To be more electronegative than gold (2.54) | Selenium | 32%
|
51 | To have its symbol not be derived from its English name | Antimony | 29%
|
57 | To have a name that doesn't end in -ium | Lanthanum | 29%
|
60 | To be found in the strongest type of commercially available magnets | Neodymium | 29%
|
78 | To come after gold in the reactivity series of metals | Platinum | 29%
|
101 | To be named after a person born in Asia | Mendelevium | 25%
|
52 | To not be a metal | Tellurium | 25%
|
23 | To be found in emeralds | Vanadium | 25%
|
27 | To be found in the cathode of a lithium-ion battery | Cobalt | 21%
|
87 | To naturally occur in trace amounts, despite being radioactive | Francium | 21%
|
49 | To be named after a place in Asia | Indium | 21%
|
102 | To be named after a person that did not receive a Nobel Prize | Nobelium | 21%
|
91 | To be named after another element | Protactinium | 21%
|
21 | To be in period 4 | Scandium | 21%
|
106 | To be named after an American | Seaborgium | 21%
|
43 | To be radioactive, despite being surrounded by stable elements | Technetium | 21%
|
39 | To be a rare earth metal, but not a lanthanide or an actinide | Yttrium | 21%
|
55 | To melt when placed in one's hand | Cesium | 18%
|
105 | To be in group 5 | Dubnium | 18%
|
64 | To be magnetic in its pure form at 20 °C | Gadolinium | 18%
|
113 | To have not had an official name until 2016 | Nihonium | 18%
|
41 | To have formerly had a different symbol for over 50 years | Niobium | 18%
|
84 | To have multiple allotropes | Polonium | 18%
|
75 | To have a melting point greater than 5,500 °C | Rhenium | 18%
|
107 | To be directly named after a person | Bohrium | 14%
|
48 | To have been known to Mendeleev when he invented the periodic table | Cadmium | 14%
|
72 | To be named after a current national capital | Hafnium | 14%
|
67 | To be named after a place in Sweden | Holmium | 14%
|
77 | To form compounds with an oxidation state of +9 | Iridium | 14%
|
103 | To be an actinide | Lawrencium | 14%
|
71 | To be named after a place in France | Lutetium | 14%
|
93 | To be more dense than gold | Neptunium | 14%
|
38 | To have an atomic mass less than 100 | Strontium | 14%
|
56 | To react with water | Barium | 11%
|
112 | To be named after a Slav | Copernicium | 11%
|
116 | To have a half life shorter than one minute | Livermorium | 11%
|
42 | To be considered an essential element for human survival | Molybdenum | 11%
|
46 | To have an ISO currency code (e.g. USD or EUR) | Palladium | 11%
|
59 | To have an odd atomic number | Praseodymium | 11%
|
45 | To be part of the platinum group of metals | Rhodium | 11%
|
44 | To be named after a place in Eastern Europe | Ruthenium | 11%
|
104 | To have a name that is more than 12 letters long | Rutherfordium | 11%
|
73 | To be considered a refractory metal | Tantalum | 11%
|
81 | To be known for its toxicity | Thallium | 11%
|
110 | To be on the periodic table | Darmstadtium | 7%
|
66 | To have any stable isotopes | Dysprosium | 7%
|
100 | To have an atomic number that is a perfect square | Fermium | 7%
|
114 | To be named after a Russian | Flerovium | 7%
|
108 | To have a half life longer than an hour | Hassium | 7%
|
76 | To have a boiling point greater than 5000 °C | Osmium | 7%
|
69 | To be named after a place in Scandinavia | Thulium | 7%
|
58 | To have a vowel in its symbol | Cerium | 4%
|
61 | To be radioluminescent | Promethium | 4%
|
62 | To be indirectly named after a person | Samarium | 4%
|
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