Geographic and Magnetic Poles
Geographic and magnetic poles
Earth's geographic poles are fixed by the axis of Earth's rotation . On maps, the north and south geographic poles are located at the congruence of lines of longitude . Earth's geographic poles and magnetic poles are not located in the same place—in fact they are hundreds of miles apart. As are all points on Earth, the northern magnetic pole is south of the northern geographic pole (located on the polar ice cap) and is presently located near Bathurst Island in northern Canada, approximately 1,000 mi (1,600 km) from the geographic North Pole. The southern magnetic pole is displaced hundreds of miles away from the southern geographic pole on the Antarctic continent.
Although fixed by the axis of rotation, the geographic poles undergo slight wobble-like displacements in a circular pattern that shift the poles approximately six meters per year. Located on shifting polar ice , the North Pole (geographic pole) is technically defined as that point 90° N latitude , 0° longitude (although, because all longitude lines converge at the poles, any value of longitude can be substituted to indicate the same geographic point). The South Pole (geographic pole) is technically defined as that point 90° S latitude, 0° longitude. Early explorers used sextants and took celestial readings to determine the geographic poles. Modern explorers reply on GPS coordinates to accurately determine the location of the geographic poles.
Earth's magnetic field shifts over time, eventually completely reversing its polarity. There is evidence in magnetic mineral orientation that, during the past 10–15 million years, reversals have occurred as frequently as every quarter million years. Although Earth's magnetic field is subject to constant change (periods of strengthening and weakening) and the last magnetic reversal occurred approximately 750,000 years ago, geophysicists assert that the next reversal will not come within the next few thousand years. The present alignment means that at the northern magnetic pole, a dip compass (a compass with a vertical swinging needle) points straight down. At the southern magnetic pole, the dip compass needle would point straight up or away from the southern magnetic pole.
The magnetic poles are not stationary and undergo polar wandering. The north magnetic pole migrates about 6.2 mi (10 km) per year. The magnetic reversals mean that as igneous rocks cool from a hot magma , those that contain magnetic minerals will have those minerals align themselves with the magnetic polarity present at the time of cooling. These volcanic rocks preserve a history of magnetic reversals and when found in equidistant banded patterns on either side of sites of sea floor spreading, provide a powerful paleomagnetic proof of plate tectonics .
Navigators using magnetic compass readings must make corrections both for the distance between the geographic poles and the magnetic poles, and for the shifting of the magnetic poles. Moreover, the magnetic poles may undergo displacements of 25–37 mi (40–60 km) from their average or predicted position due to magnetic storms or other disturbances of the ionosphere and/or Earth's magnetic field. Angular corrections for the difference between the geographic poles and their corresponding magnetic pole are expressed as magnetic declination. The values for magnetic declination vary with the observer's position and are entered into navigation calculations to relate magnetic heading to true directional heading.
See also Bowen's reaction series; Cartography; Continental drift theory; Earth, interior structure; Ferromagnetic; GPS; Magnetic field; Magnetism and magnetic properties; Polar axis and tilt
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Ferdinand Foch knew Versailles would lead to war
Newspaper article from: Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque); 9/27/2009; ; 638 words
; This week (Oct. 2) in 1851 marks the birth of Ferdinand Foch, the supreme commander of the Allied armies at the end...one saw the flaws of Versailles more clearly than did Foch, who, after reading its terms, exclaimed, "This...
|
|
IN 1911, Marshal Ferdinand Foch, France's leading military strategist, declared: "Aeroplanes are interesting toys but of no military value." Thirty years later, a similar wayward prediction came from Vanneyar Bush, director of America's scientific effort in the second world war. "A 3,000-mile range rocket, shot from one continent to the other carrying an atomic bomb?
Newspaper article from: Sunday Business (London, England); 6/23/2002; 700+ words
; IN 1911, Marshal Ferdinand Foch, Frances leading military strategist, declared: Aeroplanes are...make the timetable look optimistic. History may have proved both Foch and Bush wrong; but until ABL is operational, Tellers dream remains...
|
|
Ex-Hollinger official: Give me my stuff back: Authorities impounded a photo of his dad, Black says
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 2/11/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...also include a bust of Marshal Ferdinand Foch -- a French military commander...interest in historical figures like Foch dates back to his childhood, when...suntimes.com CONRAD'S HERO Marshal Ferdinand Foch (1851-1929) led the Allied...
|
|
Extreme grapegrowing at Recline Ridge.(Recline Ridge Vineyards, Tappen, BC)(Company Profile)
Magazine article from: Wines & Vines; 6/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...the better-known reds, Marechal Foch, can be found in North American...French World War I hero Marshall Ferdinand Foch. Hardy to Zone 4, or approximately...as some Merlot that is used in a Foch blend and the occasional Gewurztraminer...
|
|
Hampshire: Fruit of the vine
Newspaper article from: Courier-News (Elgin, IL); 9/30/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...John has also been experimenting with Foch -- small, purple grapes used in to make...The French hybrid is named after Marshal Ferdinand Foch, the French commander during World War I. The Foch grapes have been tweaked from their French...
|
|
Compiegne, France, is the birthplace of Veterans Day.
Newspaper article from: The Orange County Register (Santa Ana, Calif.) (via Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service); 11/3/2003; 700+ words
; ...statue of the French field marshal, Ferdinand Foch, gazes down on a stone slab circled...delegation was dispatched to ask Foch, the top Allied commander, his...suffers, but it does not die." Foch looked up and replied with a dismissive...
|
|
In Flanders Flooded Fields: Before Ypres There Was Yser.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of History; 9/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...some (mainly French) historians that General Ferdinand Foch was "the man behind the idea of the Belgian...Based largely on a misreading of the diary of Foch's interpreter, Andre Tardieu [Avec Foch. Aout Novembre 1914, (1939)], this claim...
|
|
Drink.(Buyers Guide)
Magazine article from: Toronto Life; 3/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Thomas & Vaughan 2002 Marechal Foch *** 1/2 $14.95. Niagara Peninsula...Ontario Winter-hardy marechal foch is a hybrid developed in France and named after WWI general Ferdinand Foch. French origins notwithstanding...
|
|
Persico, Joseph E. Eleventh Month, Eleventh Day, Eleventh Hour: Armistice Day, 1918; World War I and Its Violent Climax.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: History: Review of New Books; 3/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...s surgeon without anesthesia find Ferdinand Foch remains the revanche-driven zealot...independent operational role over Foch's and Haig's objections, fare...argument, a shockingly high number of Foch's commanders pulled punches once...
|
|
France being French.(The Providence Journal)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 2/12/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Saxons" since the Napoleonic wars _ or, at any rate, since John J. Pershing and Ferdinand Foch were squabbling over issues of prestige in World War I. Marshal Foch, whose countrymen lost 1.4 million souls defending the West against the Hun...
|
|
Ferdinand Foch
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Ferdinand Foch The French marshal Ferdinand Foch (1851-1929) was commander in chief of the Allied armies in World War I. Ferdinand Foch was born on Oct. 2, 1851, at Tarbes. His early schooling...
|
|
Foch, Ferdinand
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Foch, Ferdinand (1851–1929) French general. In World War I , he helped...Ypres (1915) and the Somme (1916) led to his dismissal. In 1917, Foch returned as chief of the French general staff. In April 1918, he became...
|
|
Tarbes
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...cent.), the churches of St. Jean and St. Thérèse (13th cent.), and the base of a tower of an old castle built by the counts of Bigorre. Théophile Gautier and Marshal Ferdinand Foch were born in Tarbes.
|
|
Douglas Haig Haig, 1st Earl
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...under continual French pressure to take over more of the front, and until the joint command of himself and Gen. Ferdinand Foch was instituted (1918), the strategy and conduct of the war were tragically mismanaged. Haig has been much criticized...
|
|
Henri Philippe Pétain
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...Between the World Wars Named marshal of France on Nov. 21, 1918, P é tain emerged from the war second only to Ferdinand Foch in prestige. It was only natural that P é tain was regarded as a high military authority, but the consequences...
|