Anyone besides me have to read the Title more than once?
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Yes, but I'm just waking up, it was a florid way of explaining a subtle point, and it made sense.
I don't know why we don't have an actual term for that, it seems more meaningful than being within the arctic circle.
I want to live there and start a comedy club. What the hell is there to do? I'd make a killing.
I'm sure it's really nice for the two weeks of the year where everything is green.
Currently doing rotational work north of there. It was green until a couple weeks ago. It snow the last couple of days I was there last.
Read up on Inuit culture because you're definitely going to want to tailor your material.
I would try my jokes, but they would be having Nunavut. I'll need a good icebreaker.
Good. Now translate that into Inupiaq.
Oh North of the 60th parallel is considered Northern Canada?
Cool, now I have a reference point, as I too live North of the 60th parallel.
Its interesting in sweden/nordics because uppsala and oslo are almost above the 60th and gävle and helsinki are above it and they arent even that northern. The northernmost actual city we have is luleå at 65.5 and then theres kiruna which is the northernmost city(tho its a pretty goofy place) which is at 67.8. Then there are the norwegians with their cities that are for some reason ridiculously northern. Tromsø is almost at the 70th and its a pretty normal city all things considered.
People don't realize just how far north Europe is. The French who first settled Montreal got there in the summer, and seeing that they were at a similar latitude as Paris, prepared for a Paris winter.
They had a very rough winter.
Sort of my point. I identify as very Southern in national terms, as I'm at the far Southern end of Finland, yet still above 60°.
The Arctic Circle begins somewhere around 66° IIRC.
But the difference here is that Canadian Northern territories are a bit colder than us Nordics, because we have the Gulf stream warming us. In 2009-2010 winter I was in the army and it was the coldest winter since the Winter War, and we were doing our NCO-course march. Most of which was annoyingly staying still and waiting — without camp fires. Fuck is was cold.
The weather I have here in Åbo is basically the same as the how the Brits describe their weather, always raining. All of the wind from the Baltic Sea gets split up here. Luckily there's a bit of an archipelago to slow the worst of it. But it still bangs my windows something fierce at times. (Moreso in the previous apartment.)
Tromsø is pretty Northern yeah, but also on the coast, and warmed quite a lot by the Gulf Stream. I can see the massive difference in weather when going from the coastal city I live in to just 100 km inland to Lahti or Forssa for instance. I can just imagine how different it is on the same latitude in inland Yukon compared to Tromsø. The top of Filnand just reaches above the 70th degree, in Nuorgam. But Utsjoki (Ohcejohka) is the most Northern municipality in Finland, and the EU actually, at 69.9090° N. (Norway isn't part of the EU as we all know.)
Yeah thats also why siberia is insane because its so inland. But i dont have any right to talk about cold weather, i live in jönköping which is extremely southern. We have 30c in summer here because of global warming now.
Damn, I'm 1 degree south of y'all, just missed the party!
It's probably more like the 50th is considered northern really. 60th is into far north territory
While 50 is north enough and the absolute majority of Canadians live south of it, "Northern Canada" generally refers to the three territories (as opposed to the ten provinces), that start at 60 (mostly, there are some islands south of that).
As someone born and raised in the territories, I don't think I can claim to be from the "far north". That's the Arctic Circle haha
also, it is the most distant point on the surface of the Earth
I'm having a difficult time reconciling this with the fact the Earth is an oblate spheroid. I feel like there is a small semicircle on the 'far' side where the distance is marginally farther due to the wider vs tall dimensions.
I haven't done the math but since the opposite side is also where the oblateness starts, maybe it compensates?
Watch out for polar bears.