Is it in somebody’s declared territorial boundries?
What about the South Pole? My map shows lot of claimants.
Is it in somebody’s declared territorial boundries?
What about the South Pole? My map shows lot of claimants.
I imagine they would, if there were any land there. Last I checked, it was only ice, with ocean beneath. I am not a cartographer.
Santa Claus.
Seriously… there is no “North Pole” to claim; it’s all ice, snow or water – no land.
stuyguy, you ass! I was coming back to make a joke about Santa, and you beat me to it! I shall now perish, unfulfilled.
It depends a little on how you define “North Pole,” however, the magnetic north pole is in Canada. But it looks like it’s pulling out of there pretty fast.
It’s ours, do you hear—ours! But it seems to be drifting inexorably towards the Russians, if you look here
No. There’s no land there and it’s in international waters.
There are lots of claims to Antarctica, some of them overlapping (and most of them meet at the South Pole itself). However, in practice these are not enforced, and there’s a big chunk that’s not claimed by anyone. Antarctica is pretty much devoted solely to scientific research at present, and lots of countries with no claims there operate scientific stations, the US, Russia, and India to name a few. The US operates a base at the South Pole itself, but does not claim it. Things could change if big deposits of oil or minerals (that could be exploited economically) were discovered there.
Letters to Santa Claus are addressed to North Pole, CANADA, last time I checked. But maybe only Canadian kids do that.
Peace
As for the south pole, it is covered under The Antarctic Treaty:
http://www.nsf.gov/od/opp/antarct/anttrty.htm
Which (evidentially) allows for territorial claims, but you just can’t do anything with it (no military bases, always open for science etc). Don’t know if a similar agreement exists for the N. Pole
Pshaw, every kid knows that only letters to Santa that are addressed North Pole, Alaska get answered.
I believe that the claimed territiories of the countries surrounding the Arctic all come to points at the North Pole.
At least that’s the way Canada is drawn on my maps. So presumably the same goes for Alaska.
Santa’s Polar Control Room must have a lot of interesting lines painted on the floor…
inexorably, my cover has worked!
It’s not drifting…
[maniacal laughter] It’s moving via the rubber band engines I have attached to it. [/maniacal laughter]
No, Santa lives in Canada; he’s even got his own postal code, assigned by Canada Post: H-zero-H-zero-H-zero.
So letters are addressed to:
Santa Claus
North Pole
Canada
H0 H0 H0
I’m Canadian.
When I was a wee lad, I never addressed my Santa letters to Canada, just as I didn’t address letters to relatives in other parts of Canada with the name of the country, just the name of the province. So Santa Claus was apparently just at North Pole, H0H 0H0. Only recently (this year) have I learned that American kids address their letters to Canada (and apparently Canada Post actually has to deal with their letters!), and I realized that H0H 0H0 is in fact a Canadian postal code format. I don’t know what Europeans do (although I think I heard something about Finland somewhere – which makes very little sense).
So my guess is that the North Pole isn’t officially anybody’s, but it’s generally accepted that it’s in Canada.
Santa lives in Lapland. I thought everybody knew that.
I beg to differ (feel free to correct me if I’m wrong). Unfortunately I couldn’t find a map of Finland showing the boundaries between different regions, but it seems to me that Rovaniemi is on the border between the two provinces Väster- and Österbotten (to use the Swedish names) and the border to Lapland might be a bit further off to the East.
However, that doesn’t matter as Santa Claus lives in the town of Mora in the province of Dalecarlia in Sweden.
…and we all know Sinterklaas, the European SuperSaint from which your poor sissy “Santa Claus” is derived, was originally from Mhyra, Turkey.
As we collectively realise, Turkey is not situated on or near any of the two poles, magnetic or conventional. Thus, the answer is either one of the following:
[ul]
[li]Turkey owns the North Pole.[/li][li]Santa Claus is completely overdressed for his original climate.[/li][/ul]
Choose the answer you like best
Hey, at least we are agreed on the continent, right? given half a chance these Americans would have us believe Bethlehem is in Pennsylvania!
Let’s see. Brittannica says “In latitude [Canada] extends from approximately 42º N to 83º N.” That’s 7º short of the Pole.
It could be that Brittannica is part of the same anti-Canada conspiracy that’s keeping the CN Tower from being considered the world’s tallest building. But unless someone has a reference other than “Mom says that’s where Santa lives”, I’d say that the NP is not part of any country.
He’s still there, Coldie. Well actually, his sarcophagus is still there. Merchants apparently ran off with his remains in the 11th century.
Merrrrrrrry Christmas!