Not really, no. The closest permanently inhabited place to the north pole is Alert, Nunavat, Canada.
Many countries' waters surround the north pole, Canadian, Russian, Danish, and some US waters from Alaska. The frozen sea North pole is located in Canadian waters. But no country can officially claim the geographic location as their own. It's a bit like claiming a certain portion of the sky or ocean.
Since there are no known natives to the North Pole, you say it in your own language.
it becomes a magnet in it s own right with north and south poles
The North Pole is 99705 Most viable way to get letters to Santa is to put it into the fire after writing, that way the smoke finds its own way to the North Pole. If you don't want to burn it then address it, Santa Claus North Pole 99705
2, a positive and a negative yes, a magnet has two poles, a north pole and a south pole. and if you break the magnet, each magnet will obtain its own north and south poles. no matter how many times you break a magnet, they will obtain their own north and south poles
no. you have to build your own plane
Yes,every magnet has a north pole and a south pole.IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT THE SOUTH AND THE NORTH POLES :If you have a magnet and you make a line exactly in the middle you will see that one side is the north pole and the other one is a south pole . You can even experiment this : when you are done drawing a line cut your magnet by that line . Do you think that you will have two magnets and one of them is south pole and the other one is the north pole . Well no !!!!!! You will have two magnets but both of them have south and north poles.Now:Remember , you know this magnets attach to each other .But north pole and an other north pole will never attach to each other.And the same thing goes for the south poles. Two south poles will never atach.Only two different poles will attach to each other ( north and south will attach, and south and north will attach to each other as well).ALL magnets have one north pole and one south pole.
It takes about 12,450.5 miles from the north pole to the south pole or south pole to north pole.
in north pole
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The North Pole of a magnet is traditionally considered the "north" end because it is attracted to the Earth's geographic North Pole, which is actually a magnetic south pole. In magnetism, opposite poles attract, so the North Pole of a magnet is a magnetic north pole, while the Earth's North Pole behaves like a magnetic south pole. Therefore, the North Pole of a magnet is not "plus" but is simply referred to as the North Pole.
The north pole
North Pole.