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© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

Another Presentation © All rights Reserved

© 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 that the contestant calls, not the surrounding box. 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 1Round 2 Final Jeopardy

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Does It Matter? Define That Mix It Up StatesIt’s Just a Phase He’s The Man $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Round 2 Final Jeopardy Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Solid, liquid, gas, plasma

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What are the 4 states of matter? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 A substance that can’t be broken down into a simpler substance.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is an element? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 A substance made from 2 or more simpler substances.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Anything that has weight and occupies space.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 The smallest particle of an element.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What is an atom? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons and different masses.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 A change in which substances react and form new substances.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is a chemical change? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 A change in which substances stay the same but their properties change.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What is a physical change? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

$400 A process that separates substances in a solution based on particle size.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 A process that separates substances in a solution according to boiling points.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 A mixture with substances so evenly distributed that it looks like one substance.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What is a homogeneous mixture? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 In this type of mixture, the substances are noticeably different from one another.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is a heterogeneous mixture? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 A heterogeneous mixture that separates into layers over time.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 A mixture that forms when substances dissolve and form a homogeneous mixture.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is a solution? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 A mixture with particles smaller than a suspension but larger than a solution.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Definite shape, definite volume.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 No definite shape, definite volume.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 No definite shape, no definite volume.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 State in which particles are apart and moving fast.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is a gas? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 State in which particles fill a container of any shape or size.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Melting, freezing, vaporization, condensation, sublimation, deposition.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 What are phase changes? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Phase changes that are endothermic.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What are melting and vaporization? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 Phase changes that are exothermic.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 What are condensation and freezing? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Between digesting a sandwich or boiling water for a cup of tea, this is the one that involves a phase change.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is boiling water for a cup of tea? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 This is what happens to the temperature during phase change.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 What is nothing? It doesn’t change. Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 The man who organized the elements into the first periodic table.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $100 Who was Mendeleev? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The ancient Greek who first proposed that all matter is made up of atoms.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 Who was Democritus? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 Discovered that positive charged particles lie in the nucleus.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $300 Who was Rutherford? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Introduced the concept of subatomic particles to the model of the atom.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Who was Thomson? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 His early model of the atom pictures the elements as solid spheres with different masses.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $500 Who was Dalton? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved The Table State & Property Atom & Eve? Where Is It? Pot Puree Method Matters $200 $400 $600 $800 $1000 Round 1 Final Jeopardy Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The columns on the periodic table.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The rows on the Periodic Table.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Man who organized the periodic table like the card game Solitaire with rows in order of increasing mass.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Who was Mendeleeve? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 This is how scientists verified that Mendeleev was correct.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is by proving his predictions were true? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 They become less metallic and more nonmetallic.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 How do the elements change from left to right on the periodic table? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 State in which the substance takes the shape of its container.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

$400 State in which particles vibrate around a “fixed” location.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Viscosity, conductivity, malleability, density, melting point, boiling point are some.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What are physical properties? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 Flammability and reactivity are two.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What are chemical properties? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 Two of the three common evidences that a chemical change has occurred.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What are (2) change in color, production of a gas and formation of a precipitate? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The 3 subatomic particles we discussed.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What are the proton, neutron and electron? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The mass and charge of the proton.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What are 1 and positive? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 The mass and charge of the neutron.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What are 1 and no charge? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 The mass and charge of the electron.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What are 0 and negative? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 An atom that has a net positive or negative charge.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is an ion? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 This is where the protons are located.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 This is the location of the neutrons.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 Where is the nucleus? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved

$600 This is the location of the electrons.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 Where are the orbitals or energy levels? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 The number 13 in the picture above refers to this.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is the atomic number. Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 The numbers in the picture above refer to this.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is the atomic mass? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 In this picture, this is the name of the element.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 What is Al, or aluminum? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 The density of an irregularly shaped object which has a volume of 20 ml and a mass of 200 g.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is 10 g/ml? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 The volume of a rectangular object with a length of 5 cm, width of 2 cm, and height of 2 cm.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What is 20 cm 3 ? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 The metric unit you would use to measure from town to town.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is a kilometer? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 The element used as the standard for calculating the unit of atomic mass.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is Carbon-12? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $200 The name of the step in the Scientific Method that involves making a prediction.

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

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 This is what you do in the first step of the Scientific Method.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $400 What is make observations? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 A list of all the steps you will do in an experiment.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $600 What is the procedure? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 The density of water.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $800 What is 1 g/cm 3 ? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 When given mass number and atomic number, this is what you would do to find the number of neutrons in an atom.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved $1000 What is subtract atomic number from mass number? Scores

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Scores Measurement Final Jeopary Question

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved The volume of an object with a radius of 2 and a height of 10cm.

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Scores What is cm 3