Moving the Earth's Axis of Rotation
Sep. 2nd, 2011 01:29 amMists, fogs, cold rains, and other nuisances of the older civilization, have been abolished, for the pole of the earth has been tilted round so that an almost tropical climate prevails through the whole of England.The Struggle for Empire - Introduction
Assuming that (a) you could change the earth's axis of rotation to any line through its centre of gravity without harmful side effects, (b) you wanted to give Britain a warm climate, and (C) you don't want to make the American or German climates much worse, where would you put the North and South poles? Technology available includes antigravity, force fields that can keep heat out, and apparently limitless powerful sources.
later Forgot to say that I'm trying to think of a way of doing it that doesn't make Alaska, Canada and New Zealand and Australia a lot colder. I forgot to mention that in the original post, for which my bad, but there's so much mineral wealth in Alaska that I suspect the Empire would be VERY reluctant to see it under an ice cap.
Also forgot to say that I'm thinking in terms of a Mediterranean climate for Britain, so 15 degrees further south (as suggested by
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Date: 2011-09-02 06:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-02 07:48 am (UTC)New Zealand, though, is a tricky one.
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Date: 2011-09-02 01:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-02 08:34 am (UTC)Stick one of the poles in the middle of it, close to the equator, the other ends up in the middle of the Pacific ocean. Central Africa becomes like Antarctica, but the fringes should still be mostly habitable. The oil of Northern Africa and the Persian Gulf is just as accessible as Alaskan or Canadian oil is now. The mid Pacific becomes the new Arctic Ocean, most of Europe, Asia, North and South America, New Zealand and Australia end up with either temperate, or tropical climates, and you get a bunch of nice tropical archipelagos where Antarctica, Greenland, and Nunavut used to be.
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Date: 2011-09-02 10:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-02 10:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-02 11:05 pm (UTC)