Skip to content

East Tennessee Puzzle Caching 103 - Trivia Mystery Cache

Hidden : 4/1/2015
Difficulty:
3 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:

I have recently gotten very interested in puzzle caches. They confused me at first, but now I love the idea of "finding" a cache twice: once for the puzzle and then for the hide. However, puzzles are confusing! This series is meant to help you develop some tools to solve the puzzles hidden throughout our area. I am in no ways an expert, but hopefully this is helpful.


This series is developed by epeterso2. I am replicating it in East Tennessee to help puzzlers in this area!

Lesson 3: Trivia

Introduction

Lesson 1 of this series of caches gives you a generalized approach to solving puzzle caches. Lesson 2 supplies you with some basic tools that can be used to take apart a puzzle and make it solvable. With this lesson, we begin to look at some specific types of puzzles and discuss strategies applicable to each.

This lesson deals with solving a type of cache that I call a “trivia challenge”. A trivia challenge is a cache whose solution depends upon being able to correctly answer a number of trivia questions about a particular subject.

Trivia Challenges

Trivia challenges used to be difficult. Unless you were a subject matter expert on the topic at hand, you used to have to get up out of your chair, hop on the bus, head to your local library, and hunt through encyclopedias and magazines and newspapers and microfiche slides and vinyl records and videotapes and audio cassettes and arcane dusty tomes you found in the card catalog. (Remember when the card catalog was made up of actual physical cards?)

Today, due to the wide availability of high-speed internet connections, fast search engines, and massive free online repositories of all world knowledge, you can launch an effective attack on a trivia challenge without leaving the comfort of your own home computer. To solve a trivia challenge, you need to know ways in which information is organized and presented on the internet.

Search Engines

If you’re reading this online, then you probably already know what a search engine is. Search engines are probably the single most useful tool in existence for tracking down trivia.

A search engine is a tool that allows you to look for key words or phrases in a database of web pages. There is no particular ordering to any of the web pages in the database – the search engine treats them as though they were one giant mass of information.

Every search engine has its own copy of the data on the internet and its own method of determining what pages match your query. Sometimes you might have to look at lots of options to find what you’re after.

Just knowing the URL of a search engine or portal isn’t always enough – you have to know how to use that tool to effectively find what you’re after. You can’t just enter every word; you have to enter the right combination of words.

For instance, suppose your trivia challenge topic is the band Pink Floyd and the question relates to the song “Breathe”. If you enter “breathe” into Google, the first page of responses won’t have any links that relate to Pink Floyd. But “breathe pink floyd” returns only relevant matches.

One of the most powerful features of a search engine is the ability to search for things other than just keywords. You can search for images, maps, news articles … even sets of data.

Specialized Databases

There are a great many specialized databases out there that contain all sorts of excellent fodder for trivia challenges. Most of the time, entering the name of your topic (such as “curling” or “calculus” or “ice cream”) plus the word “trivia” into a search engine will give you an excellent list of starting points for finding your answers. Here are a few other databases that often come in handy.

There are Internet Movie Databases
Has every fact about every movie, television show, and video game

There are ways to search for Places Named
Find any named place in the United States by name or partial name

There are even Library Map Collections
Tons of maps from around the world and throughout time

There are World Fact Books
Geographic, political, and economic information about countries around the world

Wikis

A wiki is a collaborative informative web site that anyone with access can update. Content in a wiki is organized into pages with links to other topics in the wiki. These links allow you to find a topic, then find related topics, then find topics related to those topics, etc.

The best-known wiki is like an encyclopedia, which acts as a very large general purpose encyclopedia of human knowledge. Many other wikis exist that are tailored to specific areas of interest.

A wiki's greatest strength is also its biggest weakness - the accuracy of a wiki's contents is only as good as its contributors. It is very easy to find wrong, outdated, or incomplete information on a wiki, so use them with caution.

Forums

A forum is an online bulletin board system (remember the days of pulse-dialing into a BBS at 300 bps on your C-64?). A bulletin board system allows its users to post messages and carry on conversations on a variety of topics. Forums typically support a community of individuals unified by some common interest (such as geocaching or puzzles).

The beauty of a forum is that it is not only specific to a topic and searchable for content, but that it is also interactive. Forums are great places to ask for help if you’re stuck on a puzzle or missing a critical piece of information. If you can't find an appropriate forum that's specific to the topic, check with the Groundspeak Forums.

One note about forum etiquette: while it is okay to ask for help in solving a puzzle, it is generally frowned upon to discuss the solution to a puzzle in public. It's usually best to ask the cache owner for a hint or a pointer in the right direction before posting a public request for help.

Cranking Up the Difficulty

Puzzle writers know about all of these information sources and how easy it is for solvers to access them. Here are some ways that puzzle writers make the trivia challenge more difficult in this day of fast and easy information access.

Make it hard to find the answer. A question may reference a bit of information that exists only one web site. Or for which there are multiple conflicting source. Or doesn’t exist online at all. Or requires you to find a picture, sound file or movie clip – something that can’t be Googled.

For example, what’s the answer to this question: In Yorkshire, England, the record was set for longest distance flown by a paper airplane in what category?

Make it complicated to answer the question. This is easiest to achieve in a true/false statement with multiple components. In order for the statement to be true, every single component of the statement must be true; otherwise, the statement is false.

For example: True or false? The Barefoot Mailman’s six-day 136-mile round trip route between Palm Beach and Miami during the period of 1885 to 1892 included overnight stops in the Orange Grove House of Refuge in Delray Beach and the Fort Lauderdale House of Refuge, both of which were operated by the U. S. Coast Guard.


Exercise 3: Branch Out Into The Natural World

I would consider myself an amateur naturalist. I enjoy being outside and identifying trees, animals, plants, and such. So, here's a list of some awesome creatures that live around here.

Column A - Birds Column B - Birds Column C - Mammals
(0) American Coot (0) Eastern Bluebird (0) Red Fox
(1) Carolina Chickadee (1) Bluejay (1) Raccoon
(2) Tufted Titmouse (2) Carolina Wren (2) Coyote
(3) Cardinal (3) Raven (3) Black Bear
(4) Tennessee Warbler (4) Cedar Waxwing (4) Little Brown Bat
(5) Robin (5) Rock Dove (5) White-tailed Deer
(6) Red Tailed Hawk (6) Eastern Screech Owl (6) Grey Squirrel
(7) Bald Eagle (7) Cooper's Hawk (7) Big Brown Bat
(8) Golden Eagle (8) Turkey Vulture (8) Opossum


Column D - Plants Column E - Trees Column F - Insects
(0) Lady-Slipper Orchid (0) Eastern Dogwood (0) Honey Bee
(1) Dandelion (1) Sycamore (1) Cave Cricket
(2) Virginia Bluebells (2) White Oak (2) Cicada
(3) Wild Strawberries (3) Red Oak (3) Grasshopper
(4) Queen Anne's Lace (4) Red Maple (4) House Fly
(5) Iron Weed (5) Sugar Maple (5) Leaf Hopper
(6) Butterfly Weed (6) White Pine (6) Stink Bug
(7) Wild Rose (7) Hemlock (7) Field Cricket
(8) Jewel Weed (8) Weeping Willow


Statements

  • These birds are all part of the family accipitriformes
  • These birds are considered passeriformes
  • These birds are commonly called pigeons
  • These birds have ear tufts that are primarily used as camouflage
  • These mammals can fly!
  • These mammals are ungulates
  • These mammals are considered canidae
  • These mammals are the largest in Tennessee
  • These mammals "wash" their food
  • These mammals are rodents
  • These plants are dicots
  • These These trees are native to Tennessee
  • These Insects are in the order hemiptera
  • These insects are in the order orthoptera
  • These insects only have one pair, or one set of wings

 When you have finished with all of the statements, you will have exactly animal/plant left in each column that has not been crossed off. Plug the number next to animal/plant into the following template to find the final coordinates of this cache.

N 36 16.ABC W 82 19.DEF


You can check your answers for this puzzle on GeoChecker.com.

You might also want to try You're From Where?

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

[Answer 1] Gur pngrtbel vf "bevtnzv".[Answer 2] Snyfr. Gur Ubhfrf bs Ershtr jrer bcrengrq ol gur H.F. Yvsr Fnivat Freivpr, abg gur Pbnfg Thneq.[Puzzle] qb lbhe erfrnepu. Trg perngvir jvgu fbheprf[Cache] Erzrzore gur cneg bs gur cerivbhf yrffba gung fnlf gung uvagf znl or sbhaq va nal cneg bs gur pnpur qrfpevcgvba cntr? Jryy, gung vapyhqrf gur gvgyr bs gur rkrepvfr, gbb. Nobhg 10 sg. fbhgu bs pbbeqvangrf. Bevtvany ybpngvba jnf erzbirq.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)