There are very few cities within the Arctic Circle, and virtually every city that you can name isn't.
A few cities that are NOT include . . .
Dallas, Houston, El Paso, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, New York City, Seattle, Buffalo, Minneapolis, San Diego, Mexico City, Havana, Kingston, Oranjestad, Honolulu, Port Moresby, Port Harcourt, Port au Prince, Madrid, London, Paris, Berlin, Rome, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Bogota, Miami, New Orleans, Glasgow, Belfast, Dublin, Cartagena, Lisbon, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Haifa, Tokyo, Beijing, Jakarta, Sydney, Alice Springs, Perth, Moscow, San Salvador, Tegucigalpa, Managua, Quito, Caracas, La Paz, Anchorage, Athens, Ankara, Amman, Bangkok, Baghdad, Beijing, Cairo, Colombo, Damascus, Dhaka, Eilat, Tehran, Yangon, and a whole lot of others.
Cities that ARE within the Arctic Circle are -- Barrow, Alaska -- Murmansk and Norilsk, in Russia and those are about the only ones I can think of.
<u>Question: Why do political boundaries change?</u>
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Answer:<u>These lines, more often called borders, are created by people to separate areas governed by different groups. Sometimes, political boundaries follow physical boundaries, but most of the time you can't see them. Most maps show political boundaries. Political boundaries change over time through wars, treaties, and trade.</u>
The resulting imbalance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing thermal radiation will likely cause Earth to heat up over the next century, accelerating the melting polar ice caps, causing sea levels to rise and increasing the probability of more violent global weather patterns.
MEDCs are countries which have a high standard of living and a large GDP . LEDCs are countries with a low standard of living and a much lower GDP. ... Most of the southern hemisphere is less developed, while countries in the northern hemisphere are more developed.