is this a joke question? er... cause it's north. From anywhere the 'top' is towards the north pole... bearing in mind the earth is, er, like round.
everywhere in the northern hemisphere, weather systems travel from the southwest to the northeast.
The direction that they rotate does. Storm systems in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while ones in the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise. Tropical systems in both hemispheres tend to travel westward.
You would need to travel toward the south to reach the equator. Because Dallas is in the Northern Hemisphere not the southern hemisphere. BTW the Northern Hemisphere is the upper half of the earth. The Southern Hemisphere is the lower part of the earth.
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
It is all a matter of perspective. The southern hemisphere is below the equator from the perspective of someone living in the northern hemisphere. To an Australian, the northern hemisphere would be below the equator.
In Australia, a cyclones winds travel in a clockwise direction. In the northern hemisphere, the winds travel in a counterclockwise direction.
Their direction of movement tends to be toward the west, while almost all of them rotate clockwise.
everywhere in the northern hemisphere, weather systems travel from the southwest to the northeast.
Most tornadoes form with a counter-clockwise spin in the northern hemisphere or a clockwise spin in the southern hemisphere. Most travel northeast in the northern hemisphere and southeast in the southern.
That is the direction most storms in the temperate parts of the northern hemisphere travel, driven by the prevailing winds.
The direction that they rotate does. Storm systems in the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise while ones in the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise. Tropical systems in both hemispheres tend to travel westward.
An insightful question. In the northern hemisphere, the gnomon on a sundial will have its shadow travel around the face, and in a clockwise direction! In the southern Hemisphere the travel will be anticlockwise. But the Northern guys got there first, hence clockwise. [Likewise, the northern guys named their pole North, and that settled that issue!] Even arbitrary can sometimes have logic behind it.
Something cannot travel counter clockwise. Tornadoes usually travel in a weterly direction. Tornadoes that occur in the northern hemisphere usually spin counterclockwise, while those in the southern hemisphere usually spin clockwise.
clockwise
You would need to travel toward the south to reach the equator. Because Dallas is in the Northern Hemisphere not the southern hemisphere. BTW the Northern Hemisphere is the upper half of the earth. The Southern Hemisphere is the lower part of the earth.
All directions
North of course! There is no other way to travel.