About the last thing we'd need to worry about would be the weather. But, hypothetically speaking, since weather patterns travel from west-to-east, they would simply change to east-to- west. A major change, for example; England would no longer be a warm place to be, as the ocean stream that carries warm air from the carribean would cease.
2006-11-12 12:41:53
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The Oceans would get warmer. The earth is revolving wet to east at a little over 1000 mph. If it started going the other direction--presumably at 1000 mph.--everyone on the planet would be thrown off the right side of their continent into the ocean. All those billions of people being thrown into the oceans at once would undoubtedly raisee the temperature of the oceans. It would be like an immediate el nino.
2006-11-12 12:42:46
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answer #2
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answered by Stuff 2
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As long as the tilt of the axis relative to, the speed of the earth's rotation remained the same and the ellipse of earth's orbit relative to the Sun remained the same, nothing would change with the weather.
2006-11-12 12:56:16
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answer #3
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answered by quntmphys238 6
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The answer is very complicated. The simplest answer would be that most of the worlds climates would change, and this can be devastating to people, animals, and plants that are used to certain weather conditions.
2006-11-12 12:43:23
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answer #4
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answered by PolDak 1
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weather pattern would move in a complete opposite direction. the climates in parts of the world would change significantly.
2006-11-12 15:52:36
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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