Angle affects temperature on an hourly basis. *edit, btw check out plots of temperature during the day vs during the year. (Which doesn’t answer your question directly, but does say a little something about the relative importance of angle vs length of daylight.) You’re assuming a particular definition of warmth/heat, but these places do have a summer that is much warmer, the average annual temperature swing of ~25C is similar to many cities in the US and Europe. They are hot during the summer, relative to winter. > otherwise the North Pole and Scandinavia, having super long days, should be hot during summer That leaves Northwest Territories (NWT) it has no border with any nation just its territory neighbours and the prairie provinces to the south. The Yukon in the north-west borders the USA state of Alaska. It even has a land border via Hans Island a now shared island which Canada and Denmark used to both "fight" over. Not a province but the territory of Nunavut also border Greenland/Denmark. The Labrador border is an eastern maritime border with Denmark/Greenland. To its south the island of Newfoundland borders France via the small cluster of islands which are a territory of France called St. Newfoundland and Labrador border two countries although technically each is not what you think. My geographic fun fact is my tiny Canadian province of Prince Edward Island (PEI) is the only Canadian province that doesn't border another country (but there is one territory that also doesn't border any country).įrom British Columbia (BC) on west coast to New Brunswick (NB) and Nova Scotia (NS) on the East coast they all have a southern border with the USA.
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