The North Pole has several electromagnetic obscurities not found anywhere else. Some people also travel to the north pole as a form of extreme sports. I'm sure there are other reasons, hopefully someone else will contribute to this answer.
Yes, explorers have reached both the North and South Poles. The first successful expedition to the North Pole was led by Robert Peary in 1909, while the South Pole was first reached by Roald Amundsen in 1911.
No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.
The first explorer to reach the south pole was roald Amundsen who was shortly followed by Robert Scott falcon. Who reached the north pole first, I have no idea.
It is so far experimentally impossible to separate the North Pole from the South Pole. Even if you cut the magnet into little pieces, it'll still remain a magnet because there will still be a North pole and a South Pole
Eskimos live in areas of the Arctic, but not actually at the North Pole. No-one and nothing actually lives at the North Pole, which sits on a floating ice shelf.
I'm not so sure there R any explorers in the south pole.
The North Pole has several electromagnetic obscurities not found anywhere else. Some people also travel to the north pole as a form of extreme sports. I'm sure there are other reasons, hopefully someone else will contribute to this answer.
Explorers already have. There is a research station from the US at the south pole.
Yes, explorers have reached both the North and South Poles. The first successful expedition to the North Pole was led by Robert Peary in 1909, while the South Pole was first reached by Roald Amundsen in 1911.
I hope that the North Pole have escaped up today from saints !
Wrong pole, Peary went for the North Pole, which he claimed he reached on April 7th 1909, a claim which is still disputed today.
Cows
You would have a compass that pointed north, but a lot of the explorers compasses froze up
Robert Edwin Peary claimed to be the first person to reach the geographic North Pole in 1909. However, there is still debate among historians and explorers about the accuracy of his claim, as there is evidence that he may not have actually reached the exact location of the North Pole.
explorers carry green vegetables and fruit juices because so that they can get proper nutrition.
No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.
Because the North Pole is located in the Arctic Ocean, it is always accessed by boat. The South Pole is located on a continent, and early explorers generally man-hauled sledges to achieve the pole.