The earth has a magnetic field which is similar to a magnetic bar tilted 11 degrees. This is caused because of the North and South pole.
You can't. The only thing the earth's magnetic field can tell you is the direction from where you are toward the earth's magnetic pole. That doesn't tell you anything about where you are.
Scientists believe that it is the movements in the liquid outer core that create the magnetic field. Earth's magnetic field affects the whole planet.
Assuming there is no Earth magnetic field, and no other significant magnetic fields, they will not allign in any preferred direction.
If you mean the region of influence of the earth's magnetic field then its called the earth's magnetosphere
The earth has electric currents in its structure, that create magnetic fields.
The element that helps create Earth's magnetic field is iron. Iron is present in the Earth's core and its movement generates the planet's magnetic field through a process known as the geodynamo.
The earth's Geographic Poles are located at the earth's axis of rotation. The earth's Magnetic Poles are located nearby (within a few hundred kilometres), but not at a fixed location because they 'wander'. The magnetic polarity of the location we call 'Magnetic North' is south because it attracts the 'north (-seeking)' pole of a magnet or compass needle.
Earth is not magnetic. As you know it is stupid of you to think earth is magnetic. The Earth IS MAGNETIC!!! This is because of the Magnetic poles that the earth has. The north and south pole. This is just the general answer. It goes into a lot more detail...
The earth as a single object has a magnetic field. If Uruguay is part of the earth, it shares the earth's magnetic field.
The Earth's magnetic field is the result of electrical currents flowing in the earth.
This is known as magnetic reversal when earth's magnetic poles change places.
The magnetic force on Earth is called Earth's magnetic field or also the geomagnetic field.
As you move away from an ocean ridge, the rocks get older.
The magnetic North Pole, located in the Arctic Ocean, has the most magnetic pull on Earth. It is the point where the Earth's magnetic field points vertically downwards.
I saw a show on this topic. Every once in a while the sun shoots out solar flares, these are made out of the suns material and are dangerous, they also go pretty far. Occasionaly one heads straight for earth, but the earths magnetic is strong enough to make a "shield" around the earth (sorry if this isn't enough detail).
near both magnetic poles
The vertical component of Earth's magnetic field is zero at the magnetic equator, where the magnetic field lines are horizontal. At the magnetic equator, the magnetic field lines run parallel to the Earth's surface, resulting in a zero vertical component.