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No, it doesn't. I don't know whether you live in the northern hemisphere or Southern Hemisphere, but if you live in the northern hemisphere, the further north you go, the colder it'll get, but it'll get dark later and light earlier in the summer, and dark earlier and light later in the winter. In the North Pole and South Pole, Antarctica and the Arctic, it doesn't get dark in the summer and doesn't get light in the winter. If you live in the Southern Hemisphere, the further South you go, the colder it'll get, but it'll get dark later and light earlier in the summer, and dark earlier and light later in the winter. The reason the North Pole and South Pole are so cold, is because the sun is like a torch shining on a tennis ball, and in the middle will be warmest, and top and bottom will be coldest. If you live in the Equator, it'll be very warm, but it'll get dark at the same time all year round, so I wouldn't like to live in the Equator because the times it gets dark and light would be same all the time, I would find it a bit repetitive and boring. I don't know why Antarctica is colder than the Arctic.

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16y ago

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