The Flat Earth Society
Flat Earth Discussion Boards => Flat Earth Theory => Topic started by: sirtomato on March 13, 2021, 03:06:18 AM
-
Antarctica consistently has roughly 6 months of sunlight and daylight per year. How does this work on the flat earth where the sun goes around Antarctica and can't ever light the any of it for 6 months at a time?
I made this post earlier today. Pete Svarrior also locked this earlier with just a link to the FAQ. Going to the sunlight section, I merely saw a gif of the flat earth sun going around, along with a couple more diagrams, none of which had Antarctica being lit for half the year. My question still stands.(https://wiki.tfes.org/images/7/70/SunAnimation.gif)
How does this explain 6 months of light and dark at Antarctica?
-
My bad, I just saw another thread with this- can't delete my own threads so idk what to do here
-
My bad, I just saw another thread with this- can't delete my own threads so idk what to do here
You may be able to request it to be deleted (report the thread yourself, giving that reason), but if/assuming the thread is to stand for posterity - could you link to the thread you found that addresses your question?
-
Antarctica consistently has roughly 6 months of sunlight and daylight per year. How does this work on the flat earth where the sun goes around Antarctica and can't ever light the any of it for 6 months at a time?
I made this post earlier today. Pete Svarrior also locked this earlier with just a link to the FAQ. Going to the sunlight section, I merely saw a gif of the flat earth sun going around, along with a couple more diagrams, none of which had Antarctica being lit for half the year. My question still stands.(https://wiki.tfes.org/images/7/70/SunAnimation.gif)
How does this explain 6 months of light and dark at Antarctica?
I see the sun never sets on Greenland. That's new. It also doesn't light up half the earth. Also new.
-
Pete Svarrior also locked this earlier with just a link to the FAQ.
Re-creating threads that only just got locked is not a good idea. Please do not do that again.