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The North Pole keeps moving – here’s how that affects Santa’s holiday travel and yours

The North Pole keeps moving – here’s how that affects Santa’s holiday travel and yours

  • The North Pole is moving, which affects Santa’s holiday travel and yours. The two North Poles – geographic (true north) and magnetic (used by compasses) – are not the same.
  • The magnetic North Pole has been wandering around northern Canada for most of the past 600 years, with its speed increasing dramatically in recent centuries.
  • Compasses rely on magnetic north to determine direction, but this can be affected by declination (the angle between true and magnetic north) at a specific location. Santa needs to adjust his compass or use a smartphone with a built-in magnetometer to navigate accurately.
  • The movement of the magnetic North Pole is caused by the Earth’s active core, where molten iron and nickel move around, inducing a magnetic field that covers the entire planet.
  • Even with modern GPS systems, which can provide precise location data, they still rely on magnetic north to determine direction. So, Santa may need to use his wits (or a compass) to find your house and back home again!

Could this be the next Blitzen? Feeding a reindeer in Lapland, Finland, north of the Arctic Circle. Roberto Moiola/Sysaworld/Moment via Getty Images

When Santa is done delivering presents on Christmas Eve, he must get back home to the North Pole, even if it’s snowing so hard that the reindeer can’t see the way.

He could use a compass, but then he has a challenge: He has to be able to find the right North Pole.

There are actually two North Poles – the geographic North Pole you see on maps and the magnetic North Pole that the compass relies on. They aren’t the same.

The two North Poles

The geographic North Pole, also called true north, is the point at one end of the Earth’s axis of rotation.

Try taking a tennis ball in your right hand, putting your thumb on the bottom and your middle finger on the top, and rotating the ball with the fingers of your left hand. The place where the thumb and middle finger of your right hand contact the tennis ball as it spins define the axis of rotation. The axis extends from the south pole to the north pole as it passes through the center of the ball.

A compass with S, E, N, W and other markings

Compasses use a magnetized needle to align with Earth’s magnetic field. To find true north, a compass must be adjusted for the declination of its location, meaning the angle difference between true north and magnetic north for that spot.
Tim Reckmann/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

Earth’s magnetic North Pole is different.

Over 1,000 years ago, explorers began using compasses, typically made with a floating cork or piece of wood with a magnetized needle in it, to find their way. The Earth has a magnetic field that acts like a giant magnet, and the compass needle aligns with it.

The magnetic North Pole is used by devices such as smartphones for navigation – and that pole moves around over time.

Why the magnetic north pole moves around

The movement of the magnetic North Pole is the result of the Earth having an active core. The inner core, starting about 3,200 miles below your feet, is solid and under such immense pressure that it cannot melt. But the outer core is molten, consisting of melted iron and nickel.

Heat from the inner core makes the molten iron and nickel in the outer core move around, much like soup in a pot on a hot stove. The movement of the iron-rich liquid induces a magnetic field that covers the entire Earth.

As the molten iron in the outer core moves around, the magnetic North Pole wanders.

Lines show how the magnetic pole has moved

The magnetic North Pole has wandered since the late 1500s, picking up speed in the recent century. The dates reflect observations from expeditions. The others are based on models, with data from NOAA. The map shows northern Canada’s islands. The edge of Greenland is visible to the far right side.
Cavit/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

For most of the past 600 years, the pole has been wandering around over northern Canada. It was moving relatively slowly, around 6 to 9 miles per year, until around 1990, when its speed increased dramatically, up to 34 miles per year.

It started moving in the general direction of the geographic North Pole about a century ago. Earth scientists cannot say exactly why other than that it reflects a change in flow within the outer core.

Getting Santa home

So, if Santa’s home is the geographic North Pole – which, incidentally, is in the ice-covered middle of the Arctic Ocean – how does he correct his compass bearing if the two North Poles are in different locations?

No matter what device he might be using – compass or smartphone – both rely on magnetic north as a reference to determine the direction he needs to move.

While modern GPS systems can tell you precisely where you are as you make your way to grandma’s house, they cannot accurately tell which direction to go without your device knowing the direction of magnetic north.

Lorenz King/Wikimedia Commons

Scientists work at a temporary research station near the Geographic North Pole in 1990.
Lorenz.King@geogr.uni-giessen.de/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

If Santa is using an old-fashioned compass, he’ll need to adjust it for the difference between true north and magnetic north. To do that, he needs to know the declination at his location – the angle between true north and magnetic north – and make the correction to his compass. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has an online calculator that can help.

If you are using a smartphone, your phone has a built-in magnetometer that does the work for you. It measures the Earth’s magnetic field at your location and then uses the World Magnetic Model to correct for precise navigation.

Whatever method Santa uses, he may be relying on magnetic north to find his way to your house and back home again. Or maybe the reindeer just know the way.

The Conversation

Scott Brame does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What is the difference between the geographic North Pole and the magnetic North Pole?
A. The geographic North Pole is the point at one end of the Earth’s axis of rotation, while the magnetic North Pole is the point where a compass needle aligns with the Earth’s magnetic field.

Q. Why does the magnetic North Pole move around over time?
A. The movement of the magnetic North Pole is due to the Earth having an active core, with molten iron and nickel in the outer core moving around, inducing a magnetic field that covers the entire Earth.

Q. How fast has the magnetic North Pole been moving recently?
A. In recent years, the magnetic North Pole has been moving at speeds of up to 34 miles per year, which is much faster than its previous speed of around 6-9 miles per year.

Q. What device does Santa use to navigate on Christmas Eve?
A. Both Santa and his reindeer likely rely on a compass or smartphone with a built-in magnetometer to determine the direction they need to move.

Q. How do modern GPS systems help navigation, but not without knowing the direction of magnetic north?
A. Modern GPS systems can tell you precisely where you are, but they cannot accurately tell which direction to go without your device knowing the direction of magnetic north.

Q. What is declination in relation to compass navigation?
A. Declination refers to the angle between true north and magnetic north at a specific location, and adjusting for declination is necessary to use a compass correctly.

Q. How can Santa adjust his compass bearing if the two North Poles are in different locations?
A. Santa needs to know the declination at his location and make the correction to his compass to find true north.

Q. Why does the magnetic North Pole move towards the geographic North Pole over time?
A. Scientists cannot say exactly why, but it is thought to reflect a change in flow within the outer core of the Earth.

Q. What can be used to help correct for declination when using an old-fashioned compass?
A. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has an online calculator that can help determine the correct declination at a specific location.