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but that isn't the case. It also would seem like the ocean would dump out.

2007-01-30 17:00:48 · 5 answers · asked by thekingisback 3 in Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

ehh, none of these answered my question, i know gravity holds everything in place...australia and antarctica are in the south...there is only one True North, so there isn't no relativism..its all absolute...blah

2007-02-01 13:12:03 · update #1

5 answers

since the earth is a globe, there is no up or down. what varies is your perception of up and down. no matter where uyou stand on a globe down is always toward the inside and up is always away from the globe. get a ball and see it for yourself.

2007-01-30 18:18:25 · answer #1 · answered by de bossy one 6 · 0 0

stable quistion the sky is blue by using fact the earth is made up of little atoms and whilst the colour spectrums of the earth circulate the end result's its colours bypass throught the ambience,together as the blue waves get scattered everywhere in the sky. it is the reason the sky is blue it is likewise what supplies the sea its blue hue the sea reflects from the sky... And the reason the earth seems black from outer area is as a results of the fact in outer area you do not have those specific spectrums that set of the colour of the earth..

2016-12-16 17:28:02 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Gravity pulls everything back towards the Earth. Upside down is purely relative; to the people in the Southern Hemisphere we're upside down.

2007-01-30 17:10:25 · answer #3 · answered by Ryan S 2 · 1 1

It's a big mass of earth with lots of gravity.
Besides in space, half the time, if you think that way, the northern hemisphere is on the bottom and the ice should fall out of the arctic.

2007-01-30 17:05:16 · answer #4 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 0 1

Placing north at the top of any picture of the earth is a cultural bias. You could just as easily view everything with south as being "up". Because Europe, North America and China are all in the northern hemisphere, and we evolved mapping using a compass and the rotational pole of north, we always perceived that north was "up". You could just as easily orient everything with south as "up".

2007-01-30 17:12:50 · answer #5 · answered by anim8er2 3 · 1 1

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