no
because the world is a sphere and so not all the world can point at the sun at the same time
All the continents are approximately the same age as they separated around the same time.
Yes, that is correct.
There is no such place on Earth.
no buy a globe and see not all globes are the same.
No, of course not. As the world is round and rotates, only part of it faces the sun at any given time. This is why we have 24 time zones. When it is noon wherever you are, it is midnight at opposite side of the world.
opkkakkaka
It is all relative to several factors. Most specifically: when you start measuring. By conventional standards, the idea that you are using a standard clock based on GMT, it is night time. More specifically twelve midnight, the only time at which all points on the globe are on the same calendar day.
The time zones of the globe are typically described in relation to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). Each time zone is a region of the Earth that has the same standard time. Time zones are normally expressed as an offset from UTC, either ahead (+) or behind (-), and may also include a designated name.
No, all places on Earth do not have the same daytime. Due to the Earth's tilt and its rotation, different locations experience varying lengths of daylight throughout the year. This results in seasonal changes in daylight hours depending on a region's distance from the equator.
the difference from the prime meridian
'Cause they didn't have good enough lamps.