London serves as a transit hub for North America as well as England while JFK Intl airport and Newark airport serve as as entry points for international passengers to reach any point in U.S. Also BA operates the highest no of flights in the sector has its hub in Heathrow which has connections to many Asian places. Many Asian North American flights use the North Atlantic route.
A point 30 degrees north and 45 degrees east is in the Atlantic Ocean. It is about equidistant between Europe and the United States several hundred miles south of the Azores.
True north is on the axis the world spins on
The seven continents are Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and South America. The five oceans are the Arctic Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean, the Pacific Ocean, and the Southern Ocean.
the whole world basically used it
The northern part of the world is the North Pole. The closest country to North Pole is Greenland
The North Atlantic Ocean Route is the busiest trade route in the world.
Sea routes to the Far East from Europe (through the Suez Canal and Malacca Straits) are the busiest. In addition, the North Atlantic sea route, linking the US and Canada to Europe, is very busy as well. The Port of Singapore is the world's busiest sea port in terms of tons transported.
The Atlantic Ocean is the busiest sea passage in the world.
In the North Atlantic Ocean, en route from Europe to New York.
The busiest ocean in the world is the Atlantic Ocean. More ships transporting cargo pass through this body of water than any other. Ships pass from the Mediterranean Sea into the Atlantic also.
The Atlantic Ocean is perhaps the busiest ocean of them all. It connects the Americas, Africa and Europe. It is the trade route between the continents and is always full of cargo ships being carried around continent to continent. It spreads over 32 million square miles.
Currently, the world's busiest air route was from Seoul-Gimpo to Jeju, in South Korea. Over 10 million passengers used that route in 2012.
The Straits of Dover and it is the busiest seaway in the world.
Barcelona-Madrid as of September 19, 2006 - this is the busiest flight route overall, but it is actually domestic - in addition with the new high-speed train link between Barcelona and Madrid it is probably no longer as busy as it used to be The busiest international route could be either of two, depending on who you want to offend: Hong Kong - Taipei with some 600 connections per week is probably seen by some as a domestic route but you certainly have to fly an international flight London Heathrow - Amsterdam with some 350 flights per week is the busiest European international route and the busiest international overall if you exclude the Chinese 'pseudo-domestic' routes See the OAG website http://www.oag.com/oag/website/com/en/Press+Room/Press+Releases+2007/OAG+reveals+latest+industry+intelligence+on+the+busiest+routes+2109072 for more info
Aberdeen Airport has the world's busiest commercial helicopter operations.
Aberdeen, Scotland, UK - mostly serving north sea oil and gas installations
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)