The longest border that France has with another country is in South America!
(Only know this cos a group of us at a quiz sat and worked out all the borders that France (Europe) has with other countries!! Gobsmacked to find it wasn't even on this continent!!)
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
Noggin wrote: Wed Jul 12, 2023 11:02 am
The longest border that France has with another country is in South America!
(Only know this cos a group of us at a quiz sat and worked out all the borders that France (Europe) has with other countries!! Gobsmacked to find it wasn't even on this continent!!)
Noggin wrote: Wed Jul 12, 2023 11:02 am
The longest border that France has with another country is in South America!
(Only know this cos a group of us at a quiz sat and worked out all the borders that France (Europe) has with other countries!! Gobsmacked to find it wasn't even on this continent!!)
France also has the longest internal domestic flight doesn't it? Paris to Reunion in the Indian Ocean, still in France.
At sea level the horizon is 0 miles away, being as your eyes would be level with the sea.
Out pedanted!
Your fact is Heightist! What about midgets?
All eyes at sea level are equal height.
That's at actual sea level rather than the theoretical sea level, chart datum plus what the tide tables tell you and adjusted for local weather conditions. Atmospheric pressure, geographical features, and wind strength and direction can have a large effect on a local level.
Yambo wrote: Thu Jul 13, 2023 9:39 am
The tide doesn't actually come in and go out, or rise and fall, however you want to phrase it.
The gravitational pull of the sun and moon create a bulge in the oceans and the earth revolves into the bulge.
Which is also why the moon always shows the same side to the Earth.
One day the earth will also always show the same side to the Moon, at which time the moon will stop rising and setting - it'll just be 'fixed' in the sky and the only way to make it rise or fall will be to move. I suppose it could be the case it'll be fixed over the Pacific Ocean, in which case most people would never see it.
Bit far off for now though, probably shouldn't worry about it.
Electricity doesn’t actually flow in the wires, it flows in the gaps, the insulation or the air in an electric field… it doesn’t actually flow in the wire itself.