The diameter of the Earth from North pole to South pole is 7,899.83 miles. This is only 25 miles less then the distance around the equator, which is 7,926.41.
Differences between the North and South PolesPolar bears live only in the Arctic (though this is not actually the North Pole), and penguins live only in the Antarctic (though this is not actually the South Pole).The North Pole lies on a floating ice sheet, not a land mass, amidst the Arctic Ocean. The South Pole sits on the landmass known as the continent of Antarctica.The Antarctic contains about 90% of the world's store of ice and about 70% of the world's fresh water, locked up in ice.The Antarctic is colder than the Arctic, by about 30 degrees F.Over 4 million people live within the Arctic, yet no-one can actually live at the North Pole itself. No-one owns the Antarctic and the permanent population of the Antarctic Circle is nil, but Antarctica has numerous scientific research stations.The Arctic Circle has a large amount of the world's untapped oil reserves, and many nations are vying to drill there. It is believed there are large petroleum reserves at the Antarctic, but the Antarctic Treaty prohibits oil drilling.There is a hole in the ozone layer over the Antarctic and the South Pole. Although there is thinning of the ozone layer over the North Pole, there is not actually a hole ... yet.Because the North Pole is an ice sheet, it is more sensitive to climate changes than the South Pole and the Antarctic. The North Pole ice sheet is decreasing in size every year.There is a North Star at the North Pole but no South Star at the South Pole, but the Southern Cross is in the Southern Hemisphere of stars.There are no volcanoes at the North Pole (there can't be because there is no land) whilst there are volcanoes on Antarctica.
The continents by size, from largest to smallest, are: Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, and Australia. Asia is the largest continent, covering about 30% of the Earth's land area, while Australia is the smallest continent.
No, not all continents are wider at the north than at the south. For example, Africa is wider in the north compared to the south while South America is wider in the south compared to the north. Each continent has its own unique shape and size.
Asia Africa North America South America Antarctica Europe Australia
Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Antarctica, Europe, Australia
The North Pole and South Pole at just imaginary points on Earth the mark the northernmost and southernmost points of Earth, which means they are of the same 'size'. However, if you meant whether the Arctic Ocean or Antarctica is bigger, then the answer is the Arctic Ocean. The Arctic Ocean is 14,056,000 km2, while Antactica is 14,000,000 km2.
In the North Pole the Artic has a natural melting cycle while in the South Pole its ice shelf has the same size and shape. Penguins live in the Southern Hemisphere while Polar Bears live in the Northern Hemisphere.
not that much. the weather is even different. there were different animals weather,size of land, and there are no Santa Claus in the south pole
Exactly 2. The North Pole, and the South Pole.
The North pole and South pole are smaller than they are
the south pole is bigger because Antarctica is bigger than Greenland Greenland has absolutely nothing to do with the North Pole, as the most northern piece of it is approximately 700 kms (450 miles) away from the North Pole. You are confused by the usage of North and South Poles, The North and South Poles are just imaginary points on the Earths surface, nothing more. We have come to think that through over usage of the terms North and South Poles, that these places are actually regions, we should be using the terms Arctic (North) and Antarctic (South) for these regions.
The south pole is a single point, with no size, so I have to pick a point in Wisconsin. Let's say Madison. If one of the Earth's poles were in downtown Madison, right at the corner of S Blair St and E Washington Ave, then the other one would be located at 43.079° south latitude 90.621° east longitude. That point is in the Indian Ocean, about 1,570 miles southwest of Perth, Australia, 1,620 miles north of the Antarctic coast, and 3,510 miles south-southeast of Colombo, Sri Lanka. Sadly, this kind of question never produces a very interesting answer, because most of North America 'maps' antipodally into the Indian Ocean.
Neither the Geographic nor the Magnetic North Pole has any measurements. It has no size, no length or width. It is only a position on the Earth.
The North Pole is located in the Arctic Ocean, and land surrounds the sea. The South Pole is located in Antarctica, a continent that makes up 10% of the Earth's surface. You are not specific in your language for 'region'.
No, just as you cannot see the Earth turning from any other part of the Earth. Your view, relative to its size, is simply too small to be able to notice is rotation. However, one way you can get an idea of its motion in space is to spin around very quickly and become dizzy. Your body's loss of balance is actually because it is temporarily unable to adjust to the motion of the Earth.
No. The South Pole is a GPS location, which does not change in size.
The latitude of the north pole is 90° north. (Similarly, the latitude of the south poleis 90° south.)Looking at a globe, you notice that the parallels of latitude are all circles that areparallel to the equator and to each other, and that the closer a parallel is to thenorth or south pole, the smaller it is. Right exactly atthe pole, it's a circle withzero size, which is just a point. So you might say that the pole itself is the 'line'of 90° latitude.