Boggle BrainBusters: Element-ary Edition
How many hidden words can you find?
Exercise your mind by searching for words hidden in the Boggle cube. The more letters the better – plus bonus words to up the ante. Find as many words as you can by linking letters up, down, side-to-side, and diagonally. You may only use each letter box once within a single word. Pay special attention to the Boggle BrainBusters Bonus words! Play with a friend and compare word finds, crossing out common words. Up this week, Boggle element-ary edition.
Tip: Play on your tablet or computer
To play the game on your tablet or computer, download the puzzle image above, then use any basic photo editing software (such as Preview, available on Apple products) to mark up the puzzle, as in the example below:
Bonus answers to Boggle element-ary edition below
Boggle element-ary edition answers
NEON
GOLD
LEAD
IRON
ARGON
BORON
RADIUM
BARIUM
HELIUM
SODIUM
©2024 TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.
More Brain-Building Insight from Boomer
Brain Research to Keep Memories Fresher Longer
In the spring of 2015, a University of Virginia postdoctoral fellow, Antione Louveau, was gazing through a microscope, taking what he thought would be an unrewarding glance at the distribution of immune cells in a mouse meninge – that is, the membrane surrounding the animal’s brain. But what he saw took his breath: The cells were arranged in a pattern suggesting a network of lymphatic vessels.
Yet, no such physiological structures were known to exist … “When I first saw this, it was hard to believe my eyes,” said Jonathan Kipnis, a UVA professor of neurology who oversaw the research and directs the school’s Center for Brain Immunology and Glia. Like most brain scientists, he “thought the [brain] was mapped; I did not believe there were structures we did not know about.”
The findings had major implications for brain science.
Read more at www.Boomermagazine.com/Brain-Research-May-Keep-Memories-Longer
‘Keep Sharp: Build a Better Brain at Any Age’
Read the Boomer book review
A recent study asked Americans ages 60 and older what condition they were most afraid of getting. Alzheimer’s or dementia was the number one answer (35%), followed by cancer (23%) and stroke (15%). In Keep Sharp: Build a Better Brain at Any Age, neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta shares insights into how to stave off the dreaded dementia and keep your brain healthy.
Read more of our review at BoomerMagazine.com/Keep-Your-Brain-Healthy, with a link to Keep Sharp: Build a Better Brain at Any Age.