The seasons at the poles are spring, summer, fall and winter. Because the poles are in different hemispheres, the seasons are opposite. The dates that the seasons change is the same at both poles.
For example, when it is winter at the South Pole, it's summer at the North Pole.
The north and south poles.
The North and South Poles do have seasons, and temperatures vary between those seasons, although the ice at either poles never melts during summer (only the ice of the Arctic and Antarctic melts - these are the regions around th North and South Poles). The biggest difference in the seasons is seen in the amount of daylight. At either pole, summers will see a month of full 24-hour sunlight, day and night, whilst winters will see a month (or more) of complete 24-hour darkness, day and night.
It is not possible to create a magnet with two south poles or two north poles. Both the poles always exist along with each other. Force 2 magnets together end to end with the south poles together. You will get a north pole at each end and a big south pole in the middle. This arrangement is called a quadrupole.
North pole and South pole
poles of the same kind repel one another. poles of differet kinds attract, and this is where the saying ' opposites attract' comes from.
North and South poles
north and south actually Santa lives in the north
very cold in the winter and not to cold in the summer.
North and south poles.
The North and South Poles during Summer. It doesn't even get darker! At the poles there are only two seasons -Light -Dark
yes, the north and south poles are geographical poles.
Lines of longitude meet at the North and South Poles.
The north and south poles.
No, no barber poles at either the north or south pole.
The ends of the Earth are the North and South Poles. In terms of magnetism, the Earth's magnetic field has the North and South Magnetic Poles at opposite ends.
North and South (Poles) :)
We know that like magnetic poles repel and opposite magnetic poles attract. North will repel north and south will repel south. On the other hand, north and south attract each other.