Yes, a very brave and adventurous tourist can indeed go for a tour in the north pole. In most of these tours, you would be assisted by scientists doing their field work.
Clearly a frivolous question? Perhaps not. There are several possible answers: 1) If you are at the "North Pole", then you are not at the "Magnetic North Pole", so one mile north of the true North Pole according to a compass will take you one mile close across the ice to the magnetic north pole - and will probably look much the same 2) If you accept the concept of the North Pole representing a virtual pole through the planet that could extend beyond the earth, then to go "true north" at the north pole would require you to fly vertically up one mile in the air 3) There is no "one mile north", of a the North Pole; nor west or east; all directions on land lead south 4) If you can discern north from the North Pole and manage to walk that mile, you will find an angry gnome bitterly complaining about people you take the mickey out of physics. His name is Bert, and he likes toffee apples.
One step in any direction will take you south.
Poles...one is north-seeking (north pole) and one is south-seeking (south pole).
No one ever looked for gold in the North Pole.
The North Pole and the South Pole are two places on Earth where one cannot specifically travel east or west, as all directions point south from the North Pole and north from the South Pole.
No. There are two polar ice caps: one around the north pole and one around the south pole.
The North Pole is as far north as one can get.
The north pole of the magnet is the one that points north. The Earth magentic pole that is near the north pole is traditionally called the "magnetic north pole", but if you consider Earth as a magnet, it is really the SOUTH pole, since the north pole of a magnet is attracted to it.
No, the North Pole is not a state, it is a country. It is one the poles of the earth and is located in the Arctic.
south pole
The North Pole. (90°N is as far north as you can go.)
Though it is hardly an official scientific designation, one sometimes refers to the north pole of a magnet as the "north seeking pole." This is, of course, in accordance with the characteristic of a compass.