Any traveler circling the globe in a westward direction lengthens the day by 1 hour for every 15° of longitude traveled because the traveler is following the apparent motion of the sun; by the time he or she has traveled completely around the world, the traveler is one full day ahead of the people who have remained at the starting place of the trip. Similarly, going eastward, a traveler arrives a day behind. Close to the 180th meridian, nearly in the middle of the
of land and of civilization in the region, navigators going westward add a day to their calendars (for example, the day after February 11 would be February 13), and navigators going eastward drop a day from their calendars to correct for this gain or loss of time. The date line is curved eastward around Siberia, westward around the Aleutian Islands, and eastward around the
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