They are constantly shifting. It will be hundreds or thousands of years
before the shift has gone far enough for you to notice it.
No, the shift of the Poles (even the magnetic Poles) did not take place on 12dec12.
No, but the poles will shift in about 100,000 years.
no
They usually average 30-90 seconds a shift. They want short shifts so they can be rested for the next shift. A long shift is like 2 minutes.
magnetic poles constantly shift relative to the axis of the rotation
True. The magnetic poles move constantly.
No, Earth's magnetic poles are not located exactly on its geographical poles. The magnetic poles are located slightly off-axis and can shift over time due to changes in the Earth's magnetic field.
We have this tent and I bought all new replacement poles last July before our trip. The number I called it 800-226-9527, a place called Temple Tech. I got two short poles and two long poles for $22.45
One hypothesis relating to polar shift is known as the cataclysmic pole shift hypothesis. It states that the shift in geographical locations of the poles is causing floods and tectonic events such as earthquakes.
The Earth's magnetic poles do not align perfectly with the geographic North and South poles due to the planet's molten iron core generating a magnetic field that is not perfectly symmetrical. This causes the magnetic poles to shift and be slightly off from the true geographic poles.
Nope, Polar Shift is all hypothesis and conjecture. The scientific community is not even sure that it has ever happen here on Earth.
they tryed to climb it before the north and south poles