<br><table width='100%' cellpadding=3 cellspacing=3 border=0><tr valign='top'><th>Achievement</th><th>How to unlock
</th></tr><tr valign='top'><td>"Now That's What I Call Wisdom"</td><td>(Volume IV.)
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Achiever</td><td>Completed a tricky challenge level.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Azurite</td><td>Copper(II) carbonate produced as copper ore weathers. Was used as blue pigment in the middle ages.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Bachelor's of Rktcr</td><td>Completed all the basic challenge levels.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Calcite</td><td>Calcium carbonate. A common component of both limestone and marble.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Calling It Like You See It</td><td>Sometimes a Rktcr is just a Rktcr.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Chrysotile</td><td>Fibrous silicate. A common, naturally-occurring asbestos.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Diamond</td><td>Carbon. Produced under inhumane working conditions, sometimes used to fund horrific conflicts.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Drawing Skills</td><td>Perhaps honed in other games.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Emerald</td><td>Beryl tinted green by chromium or vanadium. Mined all over the world, predominately in Colombia and Zambia.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Empty Handed</td><td>It's never that easy.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Extracurricular Activites</td><td>Completed a user-created challenge level.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>F1 Driver</td><td>Went through the whole tutorial.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Galena</td><td>Lead(II) sulfide. A commercially-important lead ore that occasionally contains silver.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Graphite</td><td>Carbon. Used in pencils. Also, as an industrial lubricant.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Hearty Clapping</td><td>Complete a 7-gem world.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Hematite</td><td>Iron(III) Oxide. Used in the pigment Ochre.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>I Have Seen The Unicycle.</td><td>Not as tricky to complete as you might think; it just takes some time.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Incompletionist</td><td>The result, perhaps, of optimistic counting.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Junior Achiever</td><td>Completed a basic challenge level.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Left Hand On My Heart</td><td>Something doesn't quite seem... right.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Mapless Wonder</td><td>I wonder how you did it?
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Master's of Rktcr</td><td>Completed all the tricky challenge levels.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Mineralogist</td><td>Collected all gems.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Never the Same</td><td>Unless you copy/paste the path, I guess.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Obsidian</td><td>Volcanic glass. The oldest known obsidian tools date to 700,000 BCE.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Opal</td><td>Hydrated amorphous silica. Its brilliant play of color results from diffraction & interference of light passing thru internal planes of silica speres.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Overachiever</td><td>Completed an impossible challenge level.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>PhD in Rktcr</td><td>Completed all the impossible challenge levels.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Polite Applause</td><td>Complete a 3-gem world.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Quartz</td><td>Linked silicon-oxygen tetrahedra. The second-most common mineral in the earth's crust.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Ruby</td><td>Corundum tinted by chromium. Synthetic ruby is used in some lasers.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Scheelite</td><td>Calcium tungstate. Surprisingly heavy. Cut gems can be fragile.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Standing Ovation</td><td>Complete a 14-gem world.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Surprisingly Painless</td><td>Managed to (temporarily) destroy the Rktcr.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Sutherland's Finest</td><td>Turned on the paths computer.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>That Horse Ain't Right</td><td>It's orange. And it doesn't reply.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>There And Back Again</td><td>One cannot say enough.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>Tourmaline</td><td>Boron silicate. Multi-colored crystals result from changing concentrations of trace elements during crystallization.
</td></tr><tr valign='top'><td>What's Up?</td><td>And why is everything sticking to the walls?
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