That depends on the latitude. In northern Finland, north of the Arctic Circle, the Sun sets in mid-November and doesn't rise again until mid-January.
3,600 seconds in one hour.
finland is the only place in whole word where you can see and feel winter, summer, autumn and spring in one week!
No but it is very rude and bad for ther name if thay told you to turn it off and did not come to you in a hour or less i would call some one else
There are several, Finland stretches from approximately 60 to 70 degrees north.If you are looking for one particular latitude, it would probably be the Polar circle at 66 deg 33' 38" N.North of the Polar circle there are periods with 24 hour/day darkness in the winter and 24 hour/day daylight in the summer. Right at the Polar circle this happens only one day per year, but the periods of 24-hour light and darkness become longer the further north you get.
On the Antarctic continent, depending on where you are, you will have at least one 24-hour period of no daylight in winter and at least one 24-hour period of no sunset in summer.
it is located at ther north south east west in one of those
This is also known as the Winter War, since it was fought in winter (1939-1940). The Soviet Union attacked Finland to take it over, but Finland fought back hard enough that they decided to leave them alone, although some land was lost. Finland lost 20,000, but the Russians over 200,000, one of the reasons the USSR decided to get out of there.
The scheduled times are approximately one hour and 35 minutes between Amsterdam and Helsinki.
In the winter season, time is turned back one hour because the days are shorter. The average length of a day is about 8 to 10 hours.
The 20th Century-Fox Hour - 1955 One Life 1-9 was released on: USA: 25 January 1956 Finland: 7 January 1961
I found one. The United States Navy suffered a severe defeat at the hands of the Imperial Japanese Navy at the Battle of Tassafaronga, November 30, 1942.
The one located to the south from Finland is Gulf of Finland (Suomenlahti in Finnish), and the one to west from Finland is Gulf of Bothnia (Pohjanlahti).