More cute animal photos that I hope you'll love. Again, I'm only showing you their heads in most cases, and you need to identify the animals from the pictures and the clues.
There is 10,000 times more salt water than fresh water on the planet, and yet 41% of all fish species (13,000 of them) live in fresh water. It must be really crowded in those rivers and lakes!
Here we see ten flowers native to England (although not exclusively so). Each of them has been adopted as the official floral emblem of an English country or city. Identify the flowers from the photo and the clues.
Red is the most popular colour on flags, with about 155 national banners containing at least some red. Here we visit ten countries that have red as the primary colour on their flag. Identify our destination from the photo and the clues.
Our tour of the world's great galleries returns to Paris for a visit to the Musée d'Orsay. Opened in 1986, it has become a major tourist attraction with more than 3 million visitors annually.
Some countries produce quite picturesque currency, so we take a photographic trip around the monetary world. Identifying words have been blanked out of the pictures for obvious reasons.
Welcome to your own private art gallery. In the second room are landscapes by some of the greatest artists of all time. Can you identify the artist by the style?
Here are forty groups founded in the 1980s, one question for each year. I'll tell you the titles of a couple of albums and single releases. Just identify the artist.
Whether they are known for painting people, still lifes, landscapes or something more abstract, most artists cannot resist the urge to produce a self-portrait. Can you identify the artist/subject of these ten paintings?
We have been to 40 of the world's 200+ countries in the first four quizzes in this series, so they are getting tougher now. Here are ten more countries for you to identify from the photo and the clues.
It is perhaps surprising how many statues feature the person they are commemorating perched on a horse. Here we begin a trip around the world to see some of these equestrian statues.
Here is a selection of the songbirds or, more accurately, perching birds, that you can hear and see regularly in Great Britain. Identify them from the photos and the clues.
Welcome to your own private art gallery. In the first room are portraits by some of the greatest artists of all time. Can you identify the artist by the style?
We move now into the fifth room in this virtual gallery: genre painting. Here the artist depicts scenes or events from everyday life such as street scenes, interiors, workplace scenes, markets, domestics, etc.
We start this tour of the world's great galleries at one of the very best, 'Galleria degli Uffizi' in central Florence. Here are some of the most famous works of art you can see there. (A reminder that you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them.)
One of the largest museums in North America, the National Gallery of Art is situated on the National Mall in Washington D.C. Can you identify some of the most famous works housed there? (A reminder that you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them.)
By the 1920s, more than one fifth of the world's population lived within the British Empire, which covered more than a quarter of the world's land surface. It was the largest empire ever seen...
Many novels are set in real life places. For others, the author creates a whole fictional environment. Use the photos and the clues to identify the fictional locations.
I'm sure you all have a herb/spice rack at home, filled with things like dried parsley and oregano. Can you recognize these herbs before they do into the little jar, though?
For each of ten random two-digit numbers, you get three written clues and a somewhat cryptic picture clue. Select the number that fits those clues from the four options.
Settled more than 3,000 years ago, the Spanish were the first Europeans in the Marshall Islands. Named for a British admiral, they were part of German New Guinea, occupied by Japan, conquered by USA and finally self-governing in 1979.
Founded as the National Gallery of British Art in 1897, it was renamed the Tate Gallery in 1932 and Tate Britain in 2000. Here are some of the most famous works of art you can see there. (A reminder that you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them.)