How long can crocodiles stay under water without breathing? The kids’ quiz
Five multiple-choice questions – set by children – to test your knowledge, and a chance to submit your own junior brainteasers for future quizzes
Seb, 9, asks: how long can crocodiles stay under water without coming up for air?
Only about three minutes as their lungs are very small
30 minutes
Two hours
Eight hours or more
Tilly, 8, asks: why does your skin go purple under your eyes when you’re sleepy?
Having purple skin under our eyes made us safer in prehistoric times, as the colour purple helped to ward off predators
When you’re tired, your eyelids get so heavy that it bruises the skin underneath and makes it look purple
Lack of sleep can cause blood vessels to expand, which makes the skin look purple
Nobody knows
Niels, 10, asks: is it easier for a tornado to travel over grass or concrete?
It doesn’t seem to make a difference but scientists still aren’t sure
Concrete
Grass
Tornadoes don’t exist
Lonnie, 7½, asks: can the sun melt all plastics?
It can only melt some plastics as its surface isn’t hot enough
Yes
No one knows
It’s not hot enough to melt any plastics – some probes sent to the sun were made out of polystyrene
Emi, 7, asks: who invented prisons?
The Victorians
The Romans
We’re not sure – either the ancient Egyptians or the ancient Greeks
King Henry VIII
Solutions
1:D - Crocodiles can hold their breath under water for eight hours – and sometimes even longer. They do this by slowing their heart rate down to 2-3 beats a minute., 2:C - When we’re sleepy or have been deprived of sleep, it can often cause blood vessels to expand. The skin under your eyes is very thin and delicate, so this causes it to look a bit bluish-purple., 3:A - The roughness of the terrain can affect the tornado’s shape, but we can’t tell which surface it would find it easiest to pass over. There is some evidence that when a tornado travels from a smooth surface such as a field to trees or houses, it can make the tornado increase in intensity., 4:B - The temperature of the sun on its surface is about 5,500C. The plastic widely agreed to have the highest melting point is polyimide, which melts at 500C., 5:C - It’s hard to pinpoint where prisons began. There are records of them in ancient Egypt, and ancient Greeks integrated prisons into the running of society, with the Greek philosopher Plato theorising that they could be used for reform rather than just punishment.
Scores
5 and above.
4 and above.
3 and above.
2 and above.
0 and above.
1 and above.
Molly Oldfield hosts Everything Under the Sun, a podcast answering children’s questions. Do check out her books, Everything Under the Sun and Everything Under the Sun: Quiz Book, as well as her new title, Everything Under the Sun: All Around the World.