The same planets that orbit today, though Uranus and Neptune had yet to be discovered, along with Pluto (now regarded as a Dwarf Planet).
No spacecraft has ever landed on Mercury. A couple have orbited around the planet.
A year on Earth is longer than it is on two other planets, and shorter than it is on the remaining five. The farther a planet is from the sun, the longer its year is.
Venus
The order of the planets by longest year is the normal order (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). The farther away a planet's orbit is from the Sun, the longer the year.
From the last Sunday of October to the last Sunday of March, at 1600 EST it's 2100 GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) in the UK. During the rest of the year, at 1600 EST it's 2200 BST (British Summer Time) in the UK.
1600 is a leap year because 1600 is evenly divisible by 400.
The year 1600 occured in the 17th century.
Never happened.
The 16th century spanned from the year 1501 to 1600.
1.293 ccm
no, the 16th century begins with the year 1500 and ends with the year 1599. the year 1600 begins the 17th century.
Slavery has existed for thousands of years, but the transatlantic slave trade involving the forced migration of Africans to the Americas began in the early 16th century and intensified in the 17th century.
Yes
The 17th.
1600 was a leap year. 1700 and 1800 were not because they were not divisible by 400. If a year is divisible by 100, but not by 400, then it is not a leap year. That is the rules of a leap year. So 1600 was, but 1700, 1800 and 1900 were not; 2000 was and 2100 will not be.
I THINK............1600.
i am not to shore bout the date but i know the year 1981