Question:

If you were to draw a horizontal line from London to America, which American region would it land on?

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I'm curious about this, so I can find out what the weather might be like aside from overcast and rain

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  1. somewhere in northern canada


  2. by horizontal do you mean parallel to the equator? ... in that case it would be Newfoundland

    but the weather in England is nothing like the weather in Newfoundland ... it's much warmer because of the warming effect of being in the Gulf Stream (a sea current which comes across the Atlantic from the Gulf of Mexico)

    our weather tends to be moderate ... not too hot, not too cold, we might get gales but we don't really get hurricanes ... the most outstanding feature of our weather is that it's very changeable and you never know what it's going to be like tomorrow or the day after ... you can look on www.bbc.co.uk for the 5 day forecast but don't believe it too much, whatever they say the weather forecast is today I can guarantee you the forecast will have changed by tomorrow ... they don't do long range weather forecasts for the simple reason no-one knows (they did try for several years to do long range but gave it up because it was so inaccurate)

  3. It's actually a lot further north than you think. I've heard its nearly on the same latitude as Alaska, though most people think its right across from New York.

    England's weather is so warm for being so far north because its an island. It's warmed by the Gulf stream.

  4. I am not sure about the horizontal line thing. Look up a world map on google. http://www.mapsofindia.com/worldmap/worl... Also, go to www.weather.com for average London temperatures for the month you are going. http://www.weather.com/outlook/travel/bu...

  5. London is further north than all of the USA - apart from Alaska!

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