A few years ago, we posted about the RMS Warrimoo, which is remembered, as the story goes, for crossing the intersection of the international dateline and the equator at precisely the turn of the century from 1899 to 1900. In doing so, the ship was said to be in two different days, two different months, two different seasons, two different years, and also in two different centuries-all at the same time. There may even be some truth to the sea story. Click here to read more.
While the story of the RMS Warrimoo was a once in a century event, Katie Weeman, writing in the Scientific American Observations blog, discusses a well-known spot in the ocean where time itself becomes almost meaningless. Likewise, even the concept of direction gets fuzzy, at best. She is referring, of course, to the North Pole.
For most of us, the earth itself is a great Newtonian clock, spinning on its axis while orbiting a medium-sized star. A year is a full orbit, while a day is a rotation, with hours, minutes, and seconds subdivided for our convenience,
We divide the globe into 24 time zones and sailors not relying on GPS can calculate both latitude and longitude by the angular height and time of the sun at its zenith at noon.
None of this really applies at the North Pole. Weeman notes that “at the North Pole, 24 time zones collide at a single point, rendering them meaningless. It’s simultaneously all of Earth’s time zones and none of them. There are no boundaries of any kind in this abyss, in part because there is no land and no people. The sun rises and sets just once per year, so “time of day” is irrelevant as well.”
When she wrote her thoughts on the timelessness of the North Pole, Katie Weeman was working as communications support for the icebreaking research vessel Polarstern, which she describes as “deliberately locked in ice for a year to measure all aspects of that ice, the ocean beneath it and the sky above.”
While Weeman considers the meaning, or lack thereof, of time in the high Arctic, it is worth noting that even direction, the ability to chart a course, at the North Pole is limited. At the North Pole, there are only three primary directions — up, down, and South. East, West, and North are simply missing until you travel some distance away. Even South hardly counts as a unique direction because it is indeed any direction not directly up or down.
Of course, time is more than the movement of a minor planet in one of a myriad of solar systems. Scientists now define time by the unperturbed ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the caesium-133 atom. And according to Einstien’s theory of relativity, time doesn’t exist independently but is part of spacetime, a single four-dimensional manifold.
For most sailors, the ancient celestial clock is good enough, except perhaps in the high Arctic.
Weeman writes that at the North Pole, it’s all ocean, visited only rarely by an occasional research vessel or a lonely supply ship that strayed from the Northwest Passage. Sea captains choose their own time in the central Arctic. They may maintain the time zones of bordering countries—or they may switch based on ship activities.
Turning from science and navigation to a children’s fairy tale, it seems fitting that Santa Claus’s workshop is said to be at the North Pole. If one is to place Santa anywhere, it should be timeless. Unlike the timelessness of the pole, however, this legend dates back to only the 1860s, when Harper’s Weekly published a drawing by the cartoonist Thomas Nash that identified Santa’s residence as “Santa Claussville, North Pole.“
It should also be reported that tthe north pole has moved its location. Airports set their runways by the degrees of a compass. It was noted recently that the north pole has shifted its location. When this happened airports realized they needed to realign their runways with their new true heading.
@Willy haha 🙂
By the way, its the magnetic pole that is shifting but I expect you meant that.
At least we in UK don’t have to worry about variation for a short while.
Willy, that is the Magnetic North Pole which indeed moves and at some point will change places with the south pole which will make things difficult for migrating species.In 1900 it was 1200 nm, 080deg from the Geographical North Pole, in 2020 it was 400nm, 180deg moving at about 30nm per year.It is not to be confused with the Geomagnetic North Pole which is the theoretical position from a model of the Earth’s magnetic field. It is about 1100nm, 075deg from the Geographical North Pole
Weeman talks about the Geographic North Pole which is a theoretical point on a straight line running through the North and South Poles which the earth rotates on based upon the shape of the earth which is not terribly symetrical being an oblate spheroid whose shape changes with the continual upheaval of plate tectonics and the gravitational effect of the sun, moon and planets all pulling in different directions but very occasionally all together at the same time.The line does not run through the actual centre of the Earth due to this continually change of shape
Thankyou for the clarifications
Interesting post and perspective on time and cardinal direction. It’s all relative, as far as I can see.
“Time is but the stream I go a-fishing’ in.”
At the north pole, there are no east or west only north and south. North is straight down and all directions to the side are south. Time still exists with the 24 hour clock overhead, marked by the noon sun constantly rotating around the horizon.
There was no year zero. A century has 100 years, from 1 to 100. The first century started at the year 1 ad, and ended at the end of the year 100 ad. The second century started with the year 101 ad. Accordingly, the last year on the 19th Century was 1900, not 1899. The first year of the 20th Century was 1901, not 1900.