A) Approximately 4,279 square kilometres B) Approximately 5,000 square kilometres C) Approximately 6,000 square kilometres D) Approximately 3,500 square kilometres
A) Third-largest B) Fifth-largest C) Largest D) Fourth-largest
A) Torne River B) Kymi River C) Vuoksi River D) Neva River
A) Pihlajavesi B) Haukivesi C) Suur-Saimaa or Greater Saimaa D) Yövesi
A) Baltic ringed seal B) Saimaa ringed seal C) European otter D) Narwhal
A) Porcelain B) Stoneware C) Asbestos-ceramic D) Terracotta
A) Anton Chekhov B) Maxim Gorky C) Leo Tolstoy D) Fyodor Dostoevsky
A) 60 kilometres B) 70 kilometres C) 43 kilometres D) 50 kilometres
A) Lake Onega B) Lake Saimaa C) Lake Peipsi D) Lake Ladoga
A) Fishing for salmon B) Transporting wood, minerals, metals, and pulp C) Ice skating D) Swimming competitions
A) Russian influence B) A non-Uralic, non-Indo European substrate language or connected to the Sami word sápmi C) Finnish mythology D) Swedish colonization
A) It merged with another lake to form a larger body B) It dried up completely C) It was abruptly discharged through a new outlet creating thousands of square kilometres of new residual wetlands. D) It became the largest lake in Europe
A) Helsinki B) Savonlinna C) Lappeenranta D) Imatra
A) 20,000 B) 14,000 C) 10,000 D) 5,000
A) 10,000 kilometres B) Nearly 15,000 kilometres C) 20,000 kilometres D) 5,000 kilometres
A) Atlantic salmon B) Saimaa salmon C) Brown trout D) Common carp
A) Snowmobiling B) Skiing C) Visiting summer cabins and taking lake cruises D) Ice fishing
A) Twelve B) Eight C) Five D) Ten |