Seeds can travel long distances through various means such as wind, water, animals, or human activities. For instance, coconuts can drift in ocean currents for months or even years, traveling hundreds or thousands of miles before washing up on a distant shore to germinate.
The coconut is known for traveling long distances by floating across oceans. The coconut seed is buoyant and can survive for up to 120 days at sea, allowing it to be dispersed to far-flung locations.
The moon is the farthest a man has traveled. Mars is planned for 2018.
Siberia is the farthest west territory. (It's also the farthest east, depending on which way matters to you)
The third farthest planet is Saturn. The first farthest is Neptune.
Antarctica is farthest south.
Mars is the furthest we have travelled. Not really. The Moon is the farthest for people. Unmanned craft have gone way beyond Neptune.
Joseph
voyager 1 xD
The coconut is known for traveling long distances by floating across oceans. The coconut seed is buoyant and can survive for up to 120 days at sea, allowing it to be dispersed to far-flung locations.
A #16 seed has never beaten a #1 seed in March Madness.
The moon is the farthest a man has traveled. Mars is planned for 2018.
It appears to. Radiation has travelled from nearly the farthest visible stars. There seems no reason to expect it to fade out, at least from open space.
Unfamiliar with the term "crawler" lane. However it seems to refer to either the "slow" lane which (in the US) would be the travelled lane farthest to the right, or perhaps it referring to the "breakdown" lane which is usually a reference to shoulder (non-travelled) portion of the roadway.
You could travel to any city in the world, provided you travelled for enough days!
153yrds in the summer of 1982 in a par about a mile west of The White House.
This is a "paradoxial" question. The USA is not the farthest country west of Canada; in fact, you could go right across the globe and land in a place that isn't USA because you travelled west. The same goes for the east. Unless of course, you're trying to find that country before you hit the International Date Line.
Human beings have traveled about 240,000 miles from the earth. That's the distance to the moon and around it in orbit.