The land of joy and happiness is sometimes referred to as the N - O - R - T - P - O - L - E because the little elves have there own civilization where they make lots of little toys and gadgets and games and consoles and pets and pencils and pens and rubbers and clothes and scarf's and coats and gloves and shoes and computers and hard drives and screwdrivers and hammers and paper and fire and thunder and body warmers and fun and happiness and sadness and many more!
The magnetic north pole has moved approximately 1,400 miles (2,250 kilometers) since 1831. It is currently drifting at a faster rate towards Russia from the Canadian Arctic.
If you follow a compass going north, you reach close to the North Pole.
There is a geographic North Pole and a magnetic North Pole. It's also in the Arctic Circle and the magnetic North Pole is stationed directly above the Earth's axis. The geographic North Pole has moved because it's basically a slab of ice that floats around.
It depends on the echo system. If you moved them to The North Pole, they would probably go extinct.
Get attracted and stick on together
Yes, and when you reverse the current flow, the north and south pole switch ends.
It gets colder.
On December 24th in the North Pole-it is completely dark. No sun.
Not unless someone has moved it. Australia is between the Equator and the South Pole.
it gets cold
No but the magnetic pole is somewhere on the border between Alaska and canadia not true north
The magnetic north pole has moved approximately 1,400 miles (2,250 kilometers) since 1831. It is currently drifting at a faster rate towards Russia from the Canadian Arctic.
they attract
Perpetual darkness
If you follow a compass going north, you reach close to the North Pole.
The poles of the solenoid depend on the direction of the current through the coil. The current reverses if you just reverse the polarity of the voltage between the ends of the coil. Heck, if you energize the coil with AC, you can do that 120 times every second.
Because the earth's north pole happens to point [very close] to Polaris.