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The magnetic north pole has wandered away from the Canadian Arctic (solid blue line) and toward Siberia for about the past century, but it has considerably sped up over the past 20 years.
In recent months, scientists discovered the magnetic north pole was moving far faster than expected—speeding away from the Canadian arctic and towards Siberia.
Earth’s north magnetic pole is drifting away from North America and toward Siberia at such a clip that Alaska might lose its Northern Lights in the next 50 years, scientists say.
Earlier this year, scientists revealed that Earth’s magnetic north pole is shifting faster than anyone had predicted. Polar shifts aren’t uncommon and we’ve long known … ...
Every five years, the location of the Magnetic North Pole is updated. In the latest model, it continues its shift toward Siberia, but it is slowing down.
Important highlights of WMM 2025 The recent WMM update reveals that Earth’s magnetic North Pole is moving from Canada to Siberia in Russia.
The magnetic North Pole has been moving closer to Russia, with unexpected activity detected in the high Arctic as it heads towards Siberia in a way that has never been seen before.
Scientists have released a new model tracking the position of the magnetic north pole, revealing that the pole is now closer to Siberia than it was five years ago and is continuing to drift toward ...
Scientists have been tracking the magnetic North Pole for centuries, telling the British newspaper The Times that it had moved closer to the northern coast of Canada. In the 1990s, it drifted into the ...
The north magnetic pole is lurching away from its traditional home in the Canadian Arctic and toward Siberia because of a fierce tug-of-war battle being waged by two giant blobs hiding deep ...
Important highlights of WMM 2025 The recent WMM update reveals that Earth’s magnetic North Pole is moving from Canada to Siberia in Russia.