Dictionary Definition
antipodean adj : relating to the antipodes or
situated at opposite sides of the earth; "antodpodean latitudes";
"antipodal regions of the earth"; "antipodal points on a sphere"
[syn: antipodal]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- a UK /ˈæn.tɪp.əʊˌdɪi.ən/ /"
Extensive Definition
In geography, the antipodes (from
Greek
αντίποδες, from anti- "opposed" and pous "foot"; ) of any place on
Earth is its antipodal
point; that is, the region on the Earth's surface which is
diametrically opposite to it. Two points which are antipodal
[ænˈtɪpədəl] to one another are connected by a straight line
through the centre of the Earth.
In vernacular British
English and Irish
English, "The Antipodes" is sometimes used to refer to Australia,
New
Zealand and South
Africa, and "Antipodeans" to their inhabitants. Strictly
speaking, the antipodes of Great
Britain and Ireland are in the
Pacific
Ocean, south of New Zealand. The antipodes of Australia are in
the North
Atlantic Ocean, while parts of Spain, Portugal, and
Morocco are
antipodal to New Zealand.
Geography
The antipodes of any place on the Earth is the place which is diametrically opposite it — so situated that a line drawn from the one to the other passes through the centre of the Earth and forms a true diameter. For example, the antipodes of New Zealand's North Island lies in Spain. Most of the earth's land surfaces have ocean at its antipodes, this being a consequence of most land being in the northern hemisphere.An antipodal point is
sometimes called an antipode, a back-formation
from the Greek
plural antipodes, whose singular in Greek is antipous.
The antipodes of any place on
Earth must be distant from it by 180° of longitude, and must be as many
degrees to the north of the equator as the original is to
the south; in other words, the latitudes are numerically
equal, but one is north and the other south. The map shown above is
based on this relationship; it shows a
Lambert azimuthal equal-area projection map of the Earth, in
pink, overlaid on which is another map, in blue, shifted
horizontally by 180° of longitude and inverted about the equator
with respect to latitude. This map allows the antipodes of any
point on the Earth to be easily located.
Noon at the one place
is midnight at the
other (although daylight
saving and irregularly-shaped time zones
affect this in most places); seasonally, the longest day at one
point corresponds to the shortest day at the other, and midwinter at one point is
contemporaneous with midsummer at the
other.
In the calculation of days and
nights, midnight on the one side may be regarded as corresponding
to the noon either of the previous or of the following day. If a
voyager sails eastward, and thus anticipates the sun, his dating
will be twelve hours in advance, while the reckoning of another who
has been sailing westward will be as much in arrears. There will
thus be a difference of twenty-four hours between the two when they
meet. To avoid the confusion of dates which would thus arise, it is
necessary to determine a meridian
at which dates should be brought into agreement, known as the
International
Date Line.
Mathematical description
If the coordinates (longitude and latitude) of a point on the
Earth’s surface are (θ, φ), then the coordinates of the antipodal
point can be written as (θ ± 180°,−φ). This relation
holds true whether the Earth is approximated as a perfect sphere or as a reference
ellipsoid.
Etymology
The Greek word is attested in Plato's dialogue Timaeus, already referring to a spherical Earth, explaining the relativity of the terms "above" and "below": The term is taken up by Aristotle (De caelo 308a.20), Strabo, Plutarch and Diogenes Laertius, and was adopted into Latin as antipodes. The Latin word changed its sense from the original "under the feet, opposite side" to "those with the feet opposite", i.e. a bahuvrihi referring to hypothetical people living on the opposite side of the Earth. Medieval illustrations imagine them in some way "inverted", with their feet growing out of their heads, pointing upward.In this sense, Antipodes first
entered English
in 1398 in a
translation of the 13th century
De Proprietatibus Rerum by Bartholomeus
Anglicus, translated by John of
Trevisa: (Translation: Yonder in Ethiopia are the Antipodes,
men that have their feet against our feet.)
Historical significance
The term plays a certain role in the discussion about the shape of the Earth. The antipodes being an attribute of a spherical Earth, some authors used their perceived absurdity as an argument for a flat Earth. However, knowledge of the spherical Earth being widespread even during the Dark Ages, only occasionally disputed on theological grounds, the medieval dispute surrounding the antipodes mainly concerned the question whether they were inhabitable: since the torrid clime was considered impassable, it would have been impossible to evangelize them, posing a dilemma between two equally unacceptable possibilities that either Christ had appeared a second time in the antipodes, or that the inhabitants of the antipodes were irredeemably damned. Such an argument was forwarded by the Spanish theologian Tostatus as late as the 15th century.Saint
Augustine (354–430) argued against people inhabiting
the antipodes:
Since these people would have
to be descended from Adam, they
would have had to travel to the other side of the Earth at some
point; Augustine continues:
The author of the Norwegian
book Konungs
Skuggsjá, from around 1250, discusses the existence of
antipodes. He notes that they (if they exist) will see the Sun in
the north in the middle of the day - and that they will have
opposite seasons of the people living in the Northern
Hemisphere.
The first European who
actually visited the Southern Hemisphere and returned to write
about it was Marco Polo (on
his way home, sailing south of the Malay
Peninsula in 1292). He noted that it was impossible to see the
star Polaris from
there.
The idea of dry land,
inhabited or not, in the Southern climes, the Terra
Australis was introduced by Ptolemy, and
appears on European maps as an imaginary continent from the
15th
century. In spite of having been discovered relatively late by
European explorers, Australia was
inhabited very early in human history, the ancestors of the
Indigenous Australians having reached it at least 50,000 years
ago.
List of antipodes
Earth
Around 71% of the earth's surface is covered by oceans; thus the majority of locations on land do not have land-based antipodes.Cities
Exact or almost exact
antipodes:
- Palembang (Indonesia) — Neiva (Colombia)
- Padang (Indonesia) — Esmeraldas (Ecuador)
- Valdivia (Chile) — Wuhai (China)
- Hamilton (New Zealand) — Córdoba (Spain)
- Christchurch (New Zealand) — A Coruña (Spain)
- Tauranga (New Zealand) — Jaen (Spain)
To within 100 km, with at
least one major city (pop ≥ 1 million):
- Xi'an (China) — Santiago, or more precisely Rancagua or San Bernardo (Chile)
- Auckland (New Zealand) — Seville (Spain)
- Tianjin (China) — Bahía Blanca (Argentina)
- Perth (Western Australia) — Hamilton (Bermuda)
- Shanghai (China)— Salto (Uruguay)
- Taipei (Taiwan) — Asunción (Paraguay)
Other major cities or capitals
close to being antipodes:
- Madrid (Spain) — Wellington (New Zealand), ~160 km
- Bogotá (Colombia) — Jakarta (Indonesia), ~200 km
- Guayaquil (Ecuador) — Medan (Indonesia), ~220 km
- Phnom Penh (Cambodia) — Lima (Peru), ~220 km
- Irkutsk (Russia)— Punta Arenas (Chile)
- Suva (Fiji) — Timbuktu (Mali)
- Mecca (Saudi Arabia) — Avarua (Cook Islands)
- Jodhpur or Bikaner (India)— Easter Island
- Cherbourg (France)— Antipodes Islands
- Pago Pago (American Samoa) — Zinder (Niger)
- Barranquilla (Colombia)— Christmas Island (Australia)
- Hué and Da Nang (Vietnam)— Arequipa (Peru)
- Manila (Philippines) — Cuiabá (Brazil)
Cities and Geographic features
Gibraltar is
antipodal to a land location on Great
Barrier Island about 130 km from Auckland, New Zealand.
This illustrates the old bromide
that the sun never set on the British Empire; the sun still does
not set on the British Commonwealth.
The northern part of New
Caledonia, still an overseas territory of France, is antipodal
to some thinly-populated desert in Mauritania, a
part of the former French West Africa. As with the British Empire,
the sun never set on the French Empire at its peak,
either.
Santa Vitória do Palmar, the most southerly town of more than
10,000 people in Brazil, is antipodal
to Cheju
Island, the southernmost territory of the Republic
of Korea.
The Big
Island of Hawaii is antipodal
to the Okavango
Delta in Botswana.
Desolate Kerguelen
Island is antipodal to an area of thinly-inhabited plains on
the border between the US state of Montana and the
Canadian province of Saskatchewan.
St. Paul
Island and Amsterdam
Island are antipodal to thinly-populated parts of the eastern
part of the US state of Colorado.
South
Georgia Island is antipodal to the northernmost part of
Sakhalin
Island.
Lake Baikal
is partially antipodal to the Straits
of Magellan.
By definition, the North Pole and
the South
Pole are antipodes.
Other bodies
- Caloris Basin - "Weird Terrain" (Mercury)
- Mare Orientale - Mare Marginis (The Moon)
- Mare Imbrium - Mare Ingenii (The Moon)
- Argyre Planitia - Utopia Planitia (Mars)
Popular culture
In 2006, Ze Frank challenged viewers of his daily webcast the show with zefrank to create an "Earth sandwich" by simultaneously placing two pieces of bread at antipodal points on the Earth's surface. The challenge was successfully completed by viewers in Spain and New Zealand.The May 19th, 2008 Official
Lost Audio Podcast gave credence to a theory that the Island is
located at Tunisia's antipode, which is in the south Pacific east
of New Zealand.
In November 2007, during the
International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), the Russian
documentary filmmaker Victor
Kossakovsky presented his plans to make a film about
antipodes.
References
External links
- 3D dual globe schematic 3D representation of the earth and the anti-earth on the same place.
- Earth Sandwich Map dual-image map to locate the antipodes of any location on Earth.
- Antipodes map dual-image map to locate the antipodes of any location on Earth.
- Latitude and Longitude converter and Antipodal calculator Includes an antipodes location point calculator and tells the antipodal location distance. Also provides a latitude and longitude converter which can convert latitude and longitude from degree, decimal form to degree, minutes, seconds form and vice versa.
- Antipodes map Interactive maps to locate antipodal map locations
- Find your Location and Antipodal point on Google Map Found the Latitude and Longitude information and corresponding antipodal point using Google Map
- Map Tunneling Tool Tunnel to the Other Side of the Earth
antipodean in Catalan:
Antípoda
antipodean in Czech:
Protinožci
antipodean in Danish:
Antipode
antipodean in German:
Antipode
antipodean in Estonian:
Antipood
antipodean in Spanish:
Antípodas
antipodean in French: Point
antipodal
antipodean in Korean:
대척점
antipodean in Italian: Punti
antipodali (geografia)
antipodean in Hebrew: נקודות
אנטיפודיות
antipodean in Dutch:
Antipode
antipodean in Japanese:
対蹠地
antipodean in Norwegian:
Antipode
antipodean in Polish:
Antypody
antipodean in Portuguese:
Antípoda
antipodean in Russian:
Антипод
antipodean in Finnish:
Antipodi
antipodean in Swedish:
Antipod