Yes, the Aleutian Islands that are west of 169°30' west longitude are on Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Saving Time (HADT; UTC-9) from the 2nd Sunday of March to the 1st Sunday of November and on Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HAST; UTC-10) during the rest of the year. Hawaii is on Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time all year.
The time in Hawaii is always UTC-10 (Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time).
No, actually Most of Alaska is in the Alaskan Time Zone(AKST) as for Hawaiian Aleutian.. it is in the Hawaiian Aleutian Time Zone(HAST) AKST is 9 hours behind the standard time zone HAST is 10 hours behind the standard time zone
Hawaii is in Hawaii-Aleutian standard time zone (or unofficially Hawaii Standard Time: HST) (HAST; UTC-10; zone W), which includes Hawaii and most of the length of the Aleutian Islands chain (west of 169°30′W).
that would be hawaiian-aleution time ^_^
Aloha. Answer: Mai Hawai`i. A hui hou (until next time).
The Aleutian Island chain is in Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HAST=UTC-10) from November to March and Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Saving Time (HADT=UTC-9) from March to November. The rest of Alaska is in Alaska Standard Time (AKST=UTC-9) from November to March and Alaska Daylight Saving Time (AKDT=UTC-8) from March to November.
Hawaii is in the Hawaii-Aleutian Time Zone. Hawaii shares this time zone with the portion of Alaska's Aleutian Islands that's west of 169 degrees 30 minutes West longitude. Hawaii doesn't observe daylight saving time [DST]. The Aleutian portion of the time zone does observe DST.
A new Hawaiian island, Loihi, will break the surface in roughly 18,000 years. Assuming that the USA and it's states are still intact at this time, Loihi will be a new island of the state of Hawaii.
On several islands in the Aleutian Island chain (Kiska and Attu), off the coast of Alaska. Note that Alaska was not a state at the time.
Hawaii Standard Time (HST) includes Hawaii and some of the western islands of Alaska like the Aleutian Islands. Hawaii Standard Time is 10 hours behind Coordinated Universal Time (UTC-10).
They are younger and the seas have not had enough time to reclaim them.
Hawaii and some of the western islands of Alaska fall under the Hawaii-Aleutian Time Zone (HAST). Hawaii operates on Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HAST) without daylight saving time, which is UTC-10. The Aleutian Islands in Alaska, depending on their specific location, can observe HAST or Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time (HADT) during daylight saving time, which is UTC-9.