Trivia, Riddle

Posted on Thursday 11 March 2010

  • From your camp, you walk one mile south, one mile east, and one mile north. Then you are back in your camp from where you started. Where is your camp?


  • Dear m00se, The camp is located exactly on the (geographical) North Pole. Only there, it is possible that following the directions you described leads back to the starting point. Regards, Scriptor


  • Racecar-ga is correct that there are a family of "extra" solutions. Find a point just far enough from the South Pole that a circle of latitude has circumference 1 mile. Starting anywhere 1 mile north of this circle, walking one mile south brings us there, walking one mile east circles the globe, and one mile north takes us back to the original "camp". regards, mathtalk-ga


  • Because of the curvature of the earth, there is actually a very slight error in the 1 + 1/(2*pi*n) answer I posted above. The exact (assuming a spherical earth) solutions are 1 + R*arcsin(1/(2*pi*R*n)), again for any positive integer n. But the error is less than 3 millionths of an inch, which is negligible, so you may as well just use the first formula.


  • Theories? Bah! Mathematicians? Bah! These are the same guys who used to insist that the World was Flat! (I kid you not.) How on this Good Earth can anyone find a latitude of 1 mile from the South Pole? Particularly when Magnetic North ain't even at the North Pole! QED


  • I agree and i concur.


  • there can never be a direct, definite answer to this question. Due mainly to the generalisation of walking one mile south. Do we walk one mile south in a straight line, or by following the natural curvature of the earth. Are we talking about the map directions north south and east, or the magnetic ones?


  • If you were at the South Pole and you were to walk 1 mile East, you would proceed Eastwards but the turn of the Earth would prevent you from reaching an absolutely accurate position relative to the South Pole. You would proceed in a banana-like direction. Hence when you then proceeded Southwards, you could finish up ANYWHERE. Ergo ... This Riddle ONLY works for the North Pole.


  • I suspect that, unlike me, many folk who have left comments here have never been to either the North Pole or the South Pole ... So how could they possibly know what it's like up or down there? Let me tell you ... Standing atop of the World at the North Pole is truly a breathtaking experience because you can feel the Earth pulsating beneath your feet; it's impossible to stand upright as you are twirled round an round. It's probably like poor Ginger felt when Fred danced around her. Exhilirating yes but after a few twirls you soon lose track of day and night. Or North and South. Or East and West. And I defy anyone to WALK one mile in any fixed direction because sure enough you'll meet a friendly polar bear, or a crevasse, or a yeti blocking your path. And, as for setting up camp .... Just you try pitching a tent when the Earth is frigging around like a wild Dervish. And the South Pole is worse because then you have tp do it all upside down. Believe me.


  • i agree, you are on the north pole, with that informatio but one aditional question is this a conventional camp etc where a tent is set. or is it a trick question


  • Actually there are other places your camp could be as well. Your camp could be anywhere on a circle 1 + 1/(2*pi*n) miles north of the south pole, where n is any positive integer.


  • Hmmmmmmm Sorry but I can't follow Racecar's logic. If your camp is 1 mile north of the South Pole, a journey 1 mile South will take you to the South Pole. If you then walk 1 mile East, this must take you 1 mile away from the South Pole and 1 mile North from there could then take you almost anywhere! Or am I missing something?


  • In fact any circle which requires an exact number of reveolutions will work. A 1/2 mile circumfernce traveled twice, a 1/3 mile three times etc. So there is an infinite number of solutions


  • Sorry, that should've read 'in which direction would you need to go in order to walk one mile east'


  • If you're already at the south pole, in which direction would you need to go in order to walk one mile south?







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    mike @ March 11, 2010 edit
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