no
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
The North Pole and the South Pole are two places on Earth where one cannot specifically travel east or west, as all directions point south from the North Pole and north from the South Pole.
You can only travel south from the North Pole.
Monarchs travel south in the fall to avoid colder temperatures and seek out warmer climates for overwintering. In the spring, they journey north to find milkweed, which is the food source for their caterpillars, and to reach their breeding grounds.
If you were standing exactly at the North Pole, the only possible direction you would be able to travel would be south.
That depends on where you are relative to the tornado. Most tornadoes travel in an easterly direction, so if you are watichng a tornado and are south of it, it will move to your right, and if you are north of it, it will move to your left.
Magnetic field lines always travel from the north pole to the south pole outside the magnet, and from the south pole to the north pole inside the magnet.
South always south
A tornado can move in any direction, but the most common direction of travel is southwest to northeast. Southeast-moving tornadoes are not uncommon.
If you are standing precisely at the South pole, you can only travel north.
North and south do not mean up and down. Rivers always run downhill. In the case of some rivers, downhill is to the north.
You would travel south.
south
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
Travel north.
Since South Dakota is directly north of Kansas, you would travel north.
Due north.