There are 24 times zones in a day, one for each hour.
The effects of the time zones tells how long it is from 12 AM on one day to 12 AM the next day
No.
malerie day malerie day
Political bounderies make up a huge part of why time zones don't run in straight lines. They also are as big as they are because there are 24 hours in a day and 24 time zones.
24 There are a total of 41 different time offsets used around the world every year, and they have 161 different names.
there are 21 time zones in the world Since there are 24 hours in a day, wouldn't there be 24 time zones?
The last full day of summer, 2011 was...19 March in southern hemisphere time zones west of and including UTC,20 March in southern hemisphere time zones east of and including UTC+1,21 September in northern hemisphere time zones west of and including UTC-10, and22 September in northern hemisphere time zones east of and including UTC-9.
There would be 34 time zones
Since Earth rotates toward the east, time zones east of the prime meridian get the sun earlier in the day.
Every day starts at the International Date Line and then moves westward from there across time zones.
no, around the world most areas have diffrent time zones.
The concept of 24 hours in a day came many hundreds of years before time zones were even thought of.