face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="4">There’s Nothing Trivial About
Alaska
But Here's An Alaska Cruising
Trivia Game
Questions: (see
answers below)
1) Approximately how
many glaciers are there in Alaska? Choose: (a)
1,000 (b) 10,000 (c) 100,000
2) Which Alaska cities are the largest (in land mass) in North America?
3) Who was Juneau’s most notorious outlaw?
4) Name the northernmost, southernmost, westernmost, and easternmost
states of the U.S. - and describe how you can visit the state capital
of three of the four on a single cruise?
5) Which state of the U.S. has the longest shoreline?
6) The occasional expedition cruiseship calls at Little Diomede Island
in Bering Strait, off Alaska’s west coast. How far away is Russia?
7) The nation’s two largest National Forests are located in Alaska.
Where are they?
8) Every state has its state symbols. What are Alaska’s?
9) Where did the name "Alaska" come from?
10) Where may
a cruiser find the world's largest concentration of American bald
eagles?
11) In which
port city will you find Alaska's oldest building?
12) Which is
the tallest mountain in North America? And what is the controversy
surrounding its name?
Answers:
1) Incredibly, the correct answer is (c); there are an
estimated 100,000 glaciers in Alaska, taking up 29,000 square
miles of the 49th State's surface. The
longest tidewater glacier in Alaska is Hubbard Glacier, 76
miles long and more than five miles wide at it's face. A number of the
larger cruiseliners sailing Alaska waters visit this huge river of ice
located not far from the Tlingit Native village of Yakutat, near the
northern end of the Southeast Alaska panhandle.
2) Cruise
ports Sitka and Juneau. Sitka at 4,710 square miles, Juneau at 3,108
square miles,. (Source: Alaska Almanac.)
3) If you
answered Jefferson R. “Soapy” Smith you’re wrong. Soapy did his
nefarious thing in Skagway, to Juneau’s north. Robert Stroud, “the
Birdman of Alcatraz” committed the 1909 Juneau murder that sent him to
prison - including Alcatraz after he also killed a Leavenworth prison
guard.
4) You
can probably win a bar bet with this one: Hawaii, the 50th State of the
Union is the southernmost state of the U.S. The southernmost point in
the southernmost state is on the - duh! - southern shore of the Big
Island. Most northerly point in the USA is - you guessed it - Alaska.
(Pt. Barrow to be precise.) Alaska is also the farthest west. Look at
your globe; Alaska's Aleutian Islands chain stretches west to and
beyond longitude 180 degrees, the official dividing line between
western and eastern hemispheres. That’s further west even than Hawaii.
Now here’s
the really surprising fact: Alaska also qualifies as the most easterly
- yes, easterly - state in the United States. Alaska's tiny
Semisopochnoi Island can be found just inside the eastern hemisphere,
along with other more notable Alaskan islands including Amchitka (of
U.S. atomic testing note) and far-out Attu Island, site of a bloody
World War II battle during which U.S. infantrymen defeated occupying
Japanese forces. So...if your Alaska cruise makes a port call at Juneau
you will have visited the capital city of the most northern, most
western and most eastern state in the USA.
5) No
brainer here. Alaska has more shoreline than all the rest of the
nation’s coastal states combined - an impressive 6,640 miles of
mainland coastal shores and a mind-blowing 33,904 miles if you count
the shores around islands.
6) Big
Diomede Island (part of Russia) is only two and a half miles distant.
On a clear day Alaskan Eskimo residents on Little Diomede can see their
Russian cousins’ island. The international date line squeezes between
them. Thus, when it is Sunday on Little Diomede it is Monday on Big D.
7)
Tongass National Forest, the largest at 17 million acres, is located in
Southeast Alaska panhandle. In fact it takes up most of the land and
waters of the panhandle except for a few cities and villages, Glacier
Bay National Park, and some other city/state/federal setasides. Second
largest is Chugach National Park, no slouch at 5.6 million acres. It
abuts Anchorage, Seward, Valdez, and Girdwood as well as Chugach State
Park.
8)
Alaska’s flag contains eight gold stars - the Big Dipper and the North
Star, on a field of blue. The flag was designed by an Aleut
seventh-grade school boy, Benny Benson, who entered (and won) a
Territorial flag contest conducted by the American Legion. By adoption
of the Territorial Legislature, it became the official territorial (and
later the state) flag on May 2, 1927.
Other
symbols:
State
flower: Forget-Me-Not
State
bird: Willow Ptarmigan
State
fish: King Salmon
State
Marine Mammal: Bowhead Whale
State
Fossil: Wooly Mammoth
State
Gem: Jade
State
Sport: Dog Mushing
State
Tree: Sitka Spruce
State
Motto: North to the Future
State
Song: "Alaska's Flag"
9) It's derived from an Aleut word meaning "Great
Land."
10) Up to 3,000 (or more) American bald eagles flock to the
Chilkat River near Haines in Southeast Alaska in late fall and winter,
seeking late-run salmon who migrate annually to the ice-free waters.
Visitors view eagles in the vicinity during the cruise season as well,
but not in the record numbers that fly there starting in October.
11) Erskine House, in Kodiak, was built by the Russians,
probably between 1793 and 1796.
12}
North America's tallest peak rises to a height of 20,320 feet and - on
a clear day - may be seen from the port city of Anchorage or the
interior city of Fairbanks. The U.S. Board of Geographic Names insists
the mountain's official monniker is Mt. McKinley - named in 1896 to
honor William Mckinley of Ohio who at the time was a candidate for
President of the United States. Alaskans, who note that the Ohioan
never once set foot in Alaska, insist upon using the original
Athabascan Indian name: Denali. The Alaska Legislature
officially renamed the mountain "Denali" in 1976 and the Alaska State
Geographic Names Board designates it that way as well. Biggest obstacle
to changing the name on the federal roster is the Ohio congressional
delegation, who staunchly defend their favorite son.Take your choice.
(The publisher of this website is an unabashed "Denali person.")
You may view our Privacy
Policy by clicking “Site Map-–About Us”
at the bottom of the contents directory in the left-hand column of this
page.
(HOME)
|