Only the magnetic poles wander
D.Earth's magnetic and geographic poles are generally not in the same place.
Geographic poles are defined by Earth's rotation.
The circumference of the Earth measured between the North and South poles is approximately 40,007.86 kilometers.
The geographical North and South Pole - not the magnetic poles.
Around 68.7% of Earth's freshwater is locked up in ice caps, glaciers, and permanent snow at the poles.
The strength of Earth's magnetic field is strongest at the magnetic poles, which are not necessarily aligned with the geographic poles. The magnetic field is weakest at the magnetic equator.
False. Opposite poles attract. Same poles repel.
No, it is not true. The magnetic poles may be influenced by Earth's rotation, but they are certainly not defined by it.
True
Only the magnetic poles wanderD.Earth's magnetic and geographic poles are generally not in the same place.Geographic poles are defined by Earth's rotation.
The statement is false. Centrioles migrate to the poles in Anaphase.
North and South poles
The Earth's magnetic poles do not align perfectly with the geographic North and South poles due to the planet's molten iron core generating a magnetic field that is not perfectly symmetrical. This causes the magnetic poles to shift and be slightly off from the true geographic poles.
It is June.
south
because they are different parts of the earths hemispheres.
This is known as magnetic reversal when earth's magnetic poles change places.
Because the earths magnetic poles move around from year to year, and even day to day.
By the axis of earths rotation