Ice.
Away from the poles because the air near Earths surface is warm.
2
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.
No, it is not true. The magnetic poles may be influenced by Earth's rotation, but they are certainly not defined by it.
No, Earth's magnetic poles are not located exactly on its geographical poles. The magnetic poles are located slightly off-axis and can shift over time due to changes in the Earth's magnetic field.
North and South poles
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
Away from the poles because the air near Earths surface is warm.
70% or 80% of water covers the earths surface
Because the middle of the earths surface is the hottest on earth and the equator is right in the middle and the poles is at the end of the earths surfaces
No the crust covers earths surface
2
the equator daaa