Question
While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a (*) culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? ■END■
Buzzes
Summary
Tournament | Edition | Exact Match? | TUH | Conv. % | Power % | Neg % | Average Buzz |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 Chicago Open | 07/28/2024 | Y | 15 | 93% | 0% | 47% | 117.71 |