Canada is as it is further north than the US, in fact some of it is in the Arctic Circle and the very northern parts of Canada are practically in the North Pole.
Canada is as it is further north than the US, in fact some of it is in the Arctic Circle and the very northern parts of Canada are practically in the North Pole.
The North Pole and the area around it are not owned by any country. The same applies to the South Pole and Antarctica. Canada, Denmark (Greenland), Norway, Russia, and the US ( Alaska) are the countries owning land adjoining the North Pole zone.
How far away is the north pole from the US? Take your latitude and multiply by 60 nautical miles. That will give you your distance from the north pool. If you are in the southern hemisphere it will give you your distance from the south pool.
explain how poleomagnetism tells us the position of the north pole in ancient times
North pole: Settlement of any size: Alert, Nunavut, Canada (pop. 5) Town of over 1000 people: Longyearbyen, Svalbard, Norway (pop. 1800)
Minnesota.
No
It is a lot closer to the North Pole.
The US is completely in the northern hemisphere. Every place in the northern hemisphere is closer to the north pole than it is to the south pole.
Canada is closer to the North Pole, which gets much less sun energy and the USA is closer to the Equator which gets maximum energy from the sun.
The further from the equator and the closer to the poles that you get the colder the climate gets. Canada and Alaska are closer to the North Pole then the northern US. They share a similar climate to parts of Russia as they are both around the same latitude.
That would be Canada. There are islands owned by Canada farther north also the north pole.
Most people in Canada live near water. These people also generally tend to live closer to the US boarder than the north pole.
As you suspect, that depends on where it is on Earth. But you've given no information in the question to tell us that. The only thing we can guess is that the school may be in an English-speaking country. If that particular educational institution is anywhere in North America ... the US or Canada, for example ... or anywhere in Europe ... the UK, for example ... then it's in the northern hemisphere, and closer to the north pole. If it's in Australia, South Africa, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Samoa, or other English-speaking places in the southern hemisphere, then it's closer to the south pole.
Closer to overhead.
The closest locations to Argentina in North America (even excluding Central America) are much closer than the points in North America (eastern Canada) that are closest to Spain. Mexico and the southern US are closer to Argentina than to Spain. The northern US and Canada are closer to Spain.
The US state of Wyoming shares part of its western border with Idaho, so Wyoming is closer to Idaho than to Iowa.
it is in the north pole