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Just curious.

2006-07-26 14:15:59 · 26 answers · asked by Bob 3 in Education & Reference Trivia

26 answers

All places on Earth recieve virtually the same amount of sunlight in a calender year.
The poles are colder because they do not recieve direct sunlight. But as far as the length of time that you can see the sun, It equals itself out over a year.
Places closer to the equator recieve virtually the same amount of sunlight every day of the year. But the closer you get to the poles, the more drastic the change is between summer and winter.
Near the poles in the winter, you will not see the sun at all for the whole day. But in the summer you will have 24 hrs sunlight. So you see how it will all equal out by the end of the year.

2006-07-26 14:19:44 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

The vapor canopy (Prima Altohydrosphere) existed "before" the Flood; it was a cosmocataclysmic event that precipitated the Flood that collapsed the canopy. The vapor canopy encapsulated the whole Earth and formed during the coalescing of the Earth from a "plasmosphere". It was suspended 10 miles above the Earth and was roughly 1 mile thick composed of frozen H2O, carbon, nitrogen and other trace elements. It compressed the atmosphere creating a 30% oxygen concentrate plus a 300% higher geomagnetic amplitude, resulting in the phenomenon of “gigantism” (giantism) and long longevity of life. This is why humans (**** giganticus), dinosaurs and plants where enormous, in fact, this was the norm for the whole contemporaneous pool of life of the Antediluvium Edenic Earth. The Prima Altohydrosphere is not factored into the equations of conventional scientists attempts to decipher how life began, thus their results are incomplete. Additionally, our Sun was not our paternal star; it was Sirius B when it was a Blue Supergiant, a B-1 class star about 5 times the solar mass of our Sun and 75 times its intensity. Hence, life emerged on Earth via irradiation of the primordial seas by the intense stellar radiation from Sirius B in collaboration with the ionized effect of the Prima Altohydrosphere (this is relayed in the Egyptian Book of the Dead), mutually generating a “Geocrucible Effect”, much like a pressure cooker. Thus, life emerged from a “polybiological explosion” (“Spontaneous Polybiological Mass Profusionism” [SPMP] in which the entire genetic species pool of life was contemporaneous. Originally, the sea level of the Earth was 3,000 feet lower than it is today resulting in more land. Russian marine biologist, Dr. Pauline Zelinski, discovered via sonar mapping a vast metropolis off the west coast of Cuba in the Yucatan Strait that confirms this lower sea level; the metropolis is located at around 2,800 feet below sea level, and it obviously predates known history, since the sea level was merely 145 feet at it lowest during the last Ice Age. So the advance civilization that constructed this metropolis is pre-Ice Age. This also infers that our concept of “linear” civilization is inaccurate, and rather that civilization is cyclic.

2016-03-16 06:05:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

A place with little light is Newfoundland and Labrador with the least amount of sunlight per year, 1563 hours. Even on sunlit days it could be difficult to see through snow covered windows in this province, the snowiest region of Canada. Maybe these harsher days allow these residents to appreciate a fine day more than the rest of the country.

2006-07-26 14:24:23 · answer #3 · answered by justbipolar 2 · 0 0

The most sunlight is received at the equator of our planet, and consequently, temperatures at the low latitudes near the equator are warm.

The area between the warm tropics and the chilly poles is called the mid latitudes. Climates in this zone are affected by both tropical air masses moving towards the poles and polar air masses moving towards the equator.

High latitudes receive the least sunlight, creating cold climates.

So the pole answerers are probably right - except that would also apply to the north pole.

2006-07-26 14:31:00 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Oh! I've know what it is. It is actually any unknown locations such as at the south of Marie Byrd Land and Edward VII land in Antarctica. As i've seen those locations on the world map of sunshine hours previously.
The world map tells that those places recieves an average of less than 500 sunshine hours per year.

2015-02-10 15:27:53 · answer #5 · answered by Khoi Minh Vu 1 · 0 0

North Pole

2006-07-26 14:18:55 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Both poles recieve the same amount of sunlight, and the least total per year.

2006-07-26 14:18:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

South Pole

2006-07-26 14:16:45 · answer #8 · answered by :-) 3 · 0 0

The north and south poles receive the lowest angles of solar radiation throughout the year. However, if you are talking about cloudy days, the rainiest city in the world is Bergen, Norway.

2006-07-26 14:28:35 · answer #9 · answered by bionut63 2 · 0 0

Antarctica would make the most sense, it's the coldest and, at the south pole, it's either on the absolute bottom of the earth or, when the earth shifts on its axis, shifted away from the sun (both of which would lead to it being the coldest place on earth).

2006-07-26 14:20:37 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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