20,013.8 KM There are 20,013.8 Kilometers (12,436 miles)between the North and South pole.
If you started 1/2 mile north of the equator you'd end up a mile west of where you began. Or, put another way, your starting point would lie one mile to the east of your end point. If you started on the north or south pole you'd end up where you started. Or if you started 1.159 miles north of the South Pole. The first mile south would put you .159 miles north of the South Pole; the mile west would encircle the pole, putting you back at the beginning of the westward mile; then go north 1 mile to return to your starting position.
That point is about 0.9 mile south of US-212 in Gettysburg, South Dakota.
That point is about 0.26 mile south of Cypress Dr and 0.66 mile west of 32nd Ave in Berlin, Waushara County, Wisconsin.
30 degrees north and 95 degrees west is in south Texas, in the US. The point is about 4 miles south of Eastgate and 3 miles due west of the Beaumont Highway (US-90), 27 miles northeast of downtown Houston, in Liberty County.
A kilogram is a unit of mass. A mile is a unit of distance. The two units are therefore incompatible.
about 3238 miles
Just ONE - the North pole !
20 North/South blocks
Dead
Hugo knows that if the man places his car on the north pole he will be facing north and south in all directions - so driving 1 mile will result in the car being 1 mile south of the north pole.
south pole This is not the correct answer...DuFuss
There is one - the north pole. Note that you could go 1 mile south, 1 mile west, and one mile back north to end up on the north pole where you began your trip.Similarly, you could do the opposite directions from the south pole. Go 1 mile north, then 1 mile east or west, and go 1 mile back south to end up on the south pole again.(Note that moving E or W from a point near the poles involves a curved path rather than a straight line.)No, there are an infinite number. At any point on the circle that is 1+1/(2 x pi) miles from the south pole, you can go 1 mile south, 1 mile west will do a complete circuit of the South pole and get you back to where you were after the South leg, and then 1 mile North will get you back to where you started.And at any point on the circle that is 1 + 1/(4 x pi) miles from the South Pole, you can go 1 mile South, 1 mile west will do 2 laps around the pole, and 1 mile North will take you back to where you started ... etc.
Two; the north and south poles. Because a compass will always point you in the direction of the poles due to their magnetic emission, if you start exactly at the north pole and travel due south one mile and due west one more mile, your compass will point you directly back to the pole, which you will be exactly one mile away from, and likewise for the south pole.
If you started 1/2 mile north of the equator you'd end up a mile west of where you began. Or, put another way, your starting point would lie one mile to the east of your end point. If you started on the north or south pole you'd end up where you started. Or if you started 1.159 miles north of the South Pole. The first mile south would put you .159 miles north of the South Pole; the mile west would encircle the pole, putting you back at the beginning of the westward mile; then go north 1 mile to return to your starting position.
He is at the North Pole.
About 222 miles.
1 mile East