Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for June 22, 2016

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    Templo S.U.D.  almost 8 years ago

    If there’s no time zone in Antarctica, how will you know how many hours apart it is from another time zone? Western North America (British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, California, Baja California) where I live for example.

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  2. Walter brennon avatar
    didereaux  almost 8 years ago

    TEMPLO S.U.D. Look up Universal Time, or Greenwich Mean Time(this was replaced by UT)

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  3. Lonely bike
    aimlesscruzr  almost 8 years ago

    Alaska, a state that spans (east to west) almost the same width as the continental US, is on the international date line and only has one time zone that is earlier than Hawai’i by one hour. (There are a couple of the Aleutian Islands that share the same time as Hawai’i however). So by time standards, Alaska is not as far west as Hawai’i.The country of India is about the same width as Maine to Colorado (three time zones in the US) yet India has one common time zone for the entire country – UTC + 5 1/2 hours.

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  4. Mrt
    SpaceBuckaroo  almost 8 years ago

    I just wish they’d set the US to a permanent Daylight Savings Time year round, so we would not have to change our clocks twice a year. Just roll it back and leave it there.

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    Chad Cheetah  almost 8 years ago

    Antarctica doesn’t have a time zone because it’s on every line of longitude, according to “Time in Antarctica” on Wikipedia.

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    h.v.greenman  almost 8 years ago

    Does anybody really know what time it is ….

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  7. Okely d oprah cropped
    Igberto   almost 8 years ago

    My watch stopped.

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  8. Garfield
    linsonl  almost 8 years ago

    At the South Pole, every direction is North.

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  9. Mr b 3 10 15 11
    zippykatz  almost 8 years ago

    So is there a time zone at the North Pole?

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  10. Mr b 3 10 15 11
    zippykatz  almost 8 years ago

    If you’re standing on the North Pole, the tip of the earth’s axis, why do you not feel yourself turning?

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  11. Hank   alex 2015
    hankgillette  almost 8 years ago

    Must be a pretty quiet movement. I’ve never heard of it.

    How far apart would the two time zones be? Two hours?

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  12. Hank   alex 2015
    hankgillette  almost 8 years ago

    Before the railroads, every town had its own local time (based on local noon). This made a railroad schedule difficult, so the railroads developed their own standard time, known as “railroad time”. Long story short, eventually, countries adopted a standard time similar to what the railroads were doing, with multiple zones as needed (with some exceptions, as noted above).

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  13. Baby
    wjones  almost 8 years ago

    There is only one time. No matter where you are it is now.

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  14. Sunset on fire
    Fuzzy Thinker Premium Member almost 8 years ago

    Clock hands freeze so there is no need to know what time zone you are in.

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