FREE! Click here to Join FunTrivia. Thousands of games, quizzes, and lots more!
Quiz about The Last One on Earth
Quiz about The Last One on Earth

The Last One on Earth Trivia Quiz


According to scientists these are some of the last places on Earth you will find, amongst others, footsteps of dinosaurs, unclaimed land and rare languages! Good luck and enjoy.

A multiple-choice quiz by fontenilles. Estimated time: 6 mins.
  1. Home
  2. »
  3. Quizzes
  4. »
  5. General Knowledge Trivia
  6. »
  7. Thematic Fun
  8. »
  9. Thematic Unique Ideas

Author
fontenilles
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
269,374
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Difficult
Avg Score
4 / 10
Plays
1278
Awards
Top 20% Quiz
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Where is the last place on Earth where you can hear 'Tofa' one of the strangest and now the rarest language ever spoken?

Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Which of these was the last place on Earth to make radio contact with the rest of the world? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Of these, what was the last place on Earth to be unclaimed by any nation? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Which of the deserts listed was the last on Earth to be unmapped? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Of the following options, which were the last people on Earth to contact civilisation?

Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. What is the highest, last mountain on earth NOT to be conquered and where is it? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Where is the last place on Earth where dinosaurs walked? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Which of these was the last place on Earth to have an Italian flag planted, even though it's presently submerged? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Of the following, which is the last place on Earth that a piece of the original Earth's crust has been discovered?

Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. What has been predicted as the last place on Earth to keep a permanent ice cover? Hint



(Optional) Create a Free FunTrivia ID to save the points you are about to earn:

arrow Select a User ID:
arrow Choose a Password:
arrow Your Email:




Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Where is the last place on Earth where you can hear 'Tofa' one of the strangest and now the rarest language ever spoken?

Answer: Southern Siberia

Tofa is now only spoken by a handful (approx. 25 people) of nomads in the Eastern Sayan Mountains, in Southern Siberia. The suffix 'sig' can be added to any word to mean 'smell like'. For example dog-sig means you smell like a dog! No other language is known to have this kind of suffix. In the 1950s the Soviet government forced the Tofa people to learn Russian and abandon their traditional ways.
Another unusual language is the body counting system used by some tribes in Papua New Guinea. For example, in 'Kobon', one up to ten goes; little finger up to shoulder. To go higher involves counting up to the collarbone; back down the other side, back up and starting all over again. So 61 in 'Kobon' is "hand turn around second time go back biceps other side"
It must be great fun being a doctor there - "Is you arm broken or are trying to say you are ten years old?" Hehe!
2. Which of these was the last place on Earth to make radio contact with the rest of the world?

Answer: Swains Island

Anyone who has known a radio "ham" will have seen their collection of QSL cards. These are postcards sent to confirm two way communication. The American Radio Relay League administers a list of locations that qualify, and Swains Island was added in 2006.
Alas Swains Island was only on air for six days!
3. Of these, what was the last place on Earth to be unclaimed by any nation?

Answer: Marie Byrd Land

Marie Byrd Land, an area in Antarctica, was the very last place on Earth not to be claimed. Claims on Antarctica were frozen (no pun intended) in 1961 even so nobody had claimed this 1.6 million sq metres, around a tenth of the Antarctic. It is the only unclaimed bit of the land on the Earth.

Hans Island is a tiny, uninhabitable, icebound rock, situated between Greenland and Ellesmere island, claimed by both Canada and Denmark. The talks, opened in 1995, look set to go to the International Court of Justice.

Claims on the Arctic have been extant since Canada made claims, on the Sector Principle, in 1925. The five countries surrounding the Arctic; Russia, the United States, Canada, Norway and Denmark/Greenland have all made claims on territory. A Russian expedition, in 2007, aimed to prove that the Lomonosov Ridge, which passes under the North Pole, is in fact an extension of Russia's landmass.
4. Which of the deserts listed was the last on Earth to be unmapped?

Answer: The Aral Sea

Once a popular Russian seaside resort in Uzbekistan and the fourth largest lake in the world (68,000 sq km) the Aral Sea has now dried up, leaving around 50,000 sq km of uncharted desert. All that's left of the mighty 'Amu Darya River', the sea's main source, is a canal carrying a trickle of farm drainage.
Satellite photos show up brilliant white due to the salt deposits and pesticides used. A few have tried to drive across the sea bed to confirm the satellite's report, but have not got very far!
5. Of the following options, which were the last people on Earth to contact civilisation?

Answer: Seventeen Ayoreo

In 2004, a previously uncontacted group of 17 Ayoreo Indians emerged from the jungle in Paraguay, reluctantly made contact with other Ayoreo and asked for their help. Cattle ranchers had taken over their territory and cut off their water supply.
The Sentinelese live on the North Sentinel island, part of the Andaman island group, and definitely do not want outside contact. When the Indian government sent a helicopter out in the wake of the 2004 tsunami they fired arrows at it.
The Jarawa, another Andaman tribe made first contact in 1998, driven by the pressure of poachers.
Many tribes are virtually wiped out by disease and violence when they make contact with the outside world according to Survival International.
Funai, the Brazilian government's Indian Affairs department believe there are around 65 tribes in Brazil alone that have had no contact and worldwide, over one hundred tribes and up to 40,000 people.
6. What is the highest, last mountain on earth NOT to be conquered and where is it?

Answer: 40th highest in Bhutan

The highest unclimbed mountain is Gangkhar Puensum, standing at 7541 metres, in the Kingdom of Bhutan. It's been attempted on three occasions but climbers have failed to reach the summit.
Since then Bhutan has banned the climbing of peaks over 6000 metres because of local spiritual beliefs.
7. Where is the last place on Earth where dinosaurs walked?

Answer: Colorado

The very last evidence of living dinosaurs is the tracks made by a family of duck-billed plant eaters in Ludlow, Colorado. It's estimated that the tracks would have been formed around 65 million years ago.
8. Which of these was the last place on Earth to have an Italian flag planted, even though it's presently submerged?

Answer: All of the answers are correct

Empedocles, a sub-marine volcano 40 kilometres off the coast of Sicily, erupted in 1831 creating a 4 square kilometres island. The Italians, the British, the French and the Spanish all made territorial claims. However, before the dispute could be settled it sank!
In 2002, Empedocles rumbled again and although the island was still ten metres below the surface, the Italians, taking no chances, sent a diver down with an Italian flag.
9. Of the following, which is the last place on Earth that a piece of the original Earth's crust has been discovered?

Answer: Jack Hills, Western Australia

Jack Hills, in the Narryer Gneiss Terrane, contains rock formations 3.8 billion years old and within them have been found zircons from 4.4 billion years ago. Their composition has been interpreted to show that free water existed on the earth at this time, although it is still the subject of debate. It doesn't mean there are not older ones about, but finding them could be tricky.
10. What has been predicted as the last place on Earth to keep a permanent ice cover?

Answer: East Antarctica

The Arctic has already lost ten percent of its permanent ice cover. Basically the North is defrosting! According to Ron Kwok of NASA's Jet Propulsion lab in Pasadena, "multi-year ice will be gone in 40/50 years."

Western Antarctica and the Amundsen Sea, due to ocean changes, are losing ice as well.
It's predicted that East Antarctica will be the last place on Earth to have a permanent ice cover. However, civilisation may not be around to see it due to the oceans rising 70 metres!
But let me say we are not talking about the near future so don't panic.
Hope you enjoyed my quiz.
Source: Author fontenilles

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor Nannanut before going online.
Any errors found in FunTrivia content are routinely corrected through our feedback system.
4/24/2024, Copyright 2024 FunTrivia, Inc. - Report an Error / Contact Us