Well anything in the Southern Hemisphere will be going In a Counter-Clockwise motion and anything in the northern Hemisphere will be going clockwise. All this due to the inward centripetal force the earth exerts while spinning. The southern Hemisphere has seasons opposite to ours... so while our Christmas is cold and white, Down under it's probably hot.
Australia I think
counter clockwise
hurricanes north of the equtor spin counter clockwise and south is clockwise
Yes, whirlpool directions are affected by being north or south of the equator due to the Coriolis effect. In the Northern Hemisphere, whirlpools rotate clockwise, while in the Southern Hemisphere, they rotate counterclockwise. This is a result of the Earth's rotation and its impact on fluid dynamics.
It depends on your veiwpoint. The normal solar system model shows earth with its north pole pointing up and the south pole pointing down, with the celestrial poles in the same direction. If it is considered like this, then the planets orbit the sun in an anti-clockwise (or counter-clockwise as some would have it) direction when looking down from overhead.
The moon rotates on its axis in the same direction it orbits the Earth, which is counterclockwise when viewed from above the Earth's North Pole. This is known as prograde rotation.
counter clockwise
hurricanes north of the equtor spin counter clockwise and south is clockwise
The current north of the equator moves clockwise.
Its both. If you look at the north pole from space, the earth spins counter-clockwise. If you look at the south pole from space, it spins clockwise. If you look at the earth at the equator, It moves to the right, or west to east.
The moon moves counter-clockwise around the earh
Yes, whirlpool directions are affected by being north or south of the equator due to the Coriolis effect. In the Northern Hemisphere, whirlpools rotate clockwise, while in the Southern Hemisphere, they rotate counterclockwise. This is a result of the Earth's rotation and its impact on fluid dynamics.
the correct direcions are clockwise thats why we have counter and clockwise on a clock
They apparently spin in different directions. Most tornadoes in the Northern Hemisphere rotate counter-clockwise, while those in the Southern Hemisphere tend to rotate in a clockwise direction. For the most part, this is caused by the earth's rotation.
Counter clockwise (or anti-clockwise) when looking down onto the north pole.
It depends on your veiwpoint. The normal solar system model shows earth with its north pole pointing up and the south pole pointing down, with the celestrial poles in the same direction. If it is considered like this, then the planets orbit the sun in an anti-clockwise (or counter-clockwise as some would have it) direction when looking down from overhead.
it just does... google it if ur curious
The answer depends upon what is meant by a full turn. Traveling north a 90 degree turn counter-clockwise will take you west, clockwise it will take you east. A 180 degree turn (clockwise or counter-clockwise) takes you south and 360 degrees takes you north again.