I guess it depends on how one interprets your question. If you mean it never, EVER gets dark then the answer is no. However, there are places that don't get dark for many, many days in a row - like months. Places north of the Arctic Circle (66.5°N and south of the Antarctic Circle (66.6°S) go for days in continual light and then days in continual darkness. Some places literally get daylight for 6 months and then darkness for 6 months.
2007-10-14 15:23:56
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answer #1
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answered by Critters 7
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The longest day you will get is on the poles. precisely on the north or south pole, there's an afternoon of six months and a night of six months. As written above, Norway (the place I stay) Sweden, Finland, Russia, Alaska, Canada and Greenland, gets a era of "hour of darkness sunlight" as quickly as north of the polar circle at selection sixty six.5 north. yet, on the top of the year, the form of sunlight hours and dark hours are precisely the comparable, everywhere you're in the international.
2016-11-08 08:10:54
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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