Imagine that you could drill a hole straight through the Earth. Suspend your disbelief for a moment, ignoring the molten core that would fry you. Or that you would fall into the cavernous inside of the Hollow Earth. Where would you end up?
In geographical coordinates, the answer is quite simple(*): If the coordinates (longitude and latitude) of a point on the Earth’s surface are (x, y), then the coordinates of the antipodal point can be written as (x ± 180°, −y). So the latitudes are numerically equal, but one is north and the other south. And the longitudes differ from each other by 180 degrees. Plus or minus: it doesn’t really matter in which direction you count those 180 degrees, as either way will lead you to the same point (a circle having a circumference of 360 degrees).
An example. If you start out at, say, 46,95 degrees longitude West and 39,00 degrees latitude North , after you’ve dug through the Earth’s core you’ll end up at longitude 133,05° East (133,05 being the result of 180,00 – 46,95) and latitude 39,00° South.
Only, for most people, the place where you’ll end up won’t be land, but water. The oceans cover about 70% of our planet’s surface. Your antipodes (a Greek word translatable as: ‘those whose feet are on the other side’) mostly don’t have feet, but fins. If you could ’sandwich’ the Earth, as is done in this map made by Rebecca Catherine Brown (who got the idea from this site, but produced it herself and submitted it to strangemaps@gmail.com), the overlap of land would be surprisingly small.
I’m reminded of the movie ‘The China Syndrome’, the title of which refers to the idea that if you dig a hole through the Earth starting in the US, you end up in China. This map shows it ain’t so. In fact, only a little bit of China overlaps – and with the southern part of South America. Funnily enough, the good people of Argentina seem to have taken this into account when naming the city of Formosa, which is the antipode of Taiwan, the island off the Chinese coast formerly known as… Formosa. There’s almost no overlap in North America, none in Africa and just a bit in Europe (the Iberian peninsula with New Zealand’s North Island).
The website Antipodes Map allows for interactive searching for antipodeal locations. Which will probably end up in some ocean or other. Anybody know the Greek word for fin?
(*) if not for me: see comments #2 and #3.


Somewhat related is Ze Frank’s “If the earth was a sandwich”: http://www.zefrank.com/sandwich/
Comment by mortenf — April 17, 2007 @ 10:29 am
Actually, the antipodes for 46.95 degrees W is 133.05 degrees E.
Comment by icedtea1954 — April 17, 2007 @ 11:18 am
@ icedtea1954:
I never was any good at anything involving mathematics. I am absolutely wrong, and you are absolutely right. Thanks!
Comment by strangemaps — April 17, 2007 @ 12:10 pm
Actually, there is some land antipodes in Africa. Looks like Hawai’i overlaps with parts of Batswana and nearby areas, and the map looks like some other other island chains overlap near Moracco.
Not a lot, but there.
Comment by Galen — April 17, 2007 @ 3:27 pm
[...] con transparencias y antípodas puede crearse un mapa sorprendente. Ése es el juego que propone strange maps, respondiendo a la pregunta: ¿dónde están “mis” [...]
Pingback by La Cartoteca » Blog Archive » Transparencia antipódica — April 17, 2007 @ 7:01 pm
As part of the above-mentioned “Earth Sandwich” project, Ze Frank created a nifty Google tool that will display any point’s antipode in real time.
Comment by Rubrick — April 17, 2007 @ 10:47 pm
Selecting the antipodal location for almost anywhere in the United States puts you in the southern Indian Ocean. The only exceptions are the very northernmost tip of Alaska (Antarctica), Hawaii (Botswana), and a small patch of central North Dakota (Kerguelen Island).
Comment by Peter — April 18, 2007 @ 2:04 am
[...] from Strange Maps: Your Antipods Most Likely Have Fins (good to [...]
Pingback by Strange Maps, Strange Plants « distillation — April 18, 2007 @ 4:49 am
[...] interesante este mapa del mundo con sus respectivas antípodas [...]
Pingback by Las antípodas y su sombra | hombrelobo, una mente dispersa — April 18, 2007 @ 11:52 am
I once received an Where’s George hit between Honolulu, HI and Maun, Botswana.
Comment by bifyu — April 18, 2007 @ 10:54 pm
One of the more unusual antipodes must be “Maui” Island and its antipode in North Central Botswana, a town with almost the same name “Maun”.
The Herero people in Maun actually look somwewhat similar to the Hawaiians. And in both societies, the missionairies clothed the women in “mumus”!
see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herero
Comment by Dick Mayer (on Maui) — April 20, 2007 @ 6:22 am
[...] strangemaps han mostrado un mapa del mundo donde se han sombreado las zonas de tierra que empatan con sus [...]
Pingback by Mapa de las Antípodas | hablandodesigs — April 21, 2007 @ 12:28 am
My antipodes are in the outskirts of Bolivia.
(this thing is cool! :D)
Comment by nirguna — April 21, 2007 @ 12:22 pm
Anti-China includes much of the Andes. What other high spots have antipodal land?
Here’s a research project: How many places are vertices of a land tetrahedron?
Comment by Anton Sherwood — April 22, 2007 @ 5:24 am
Antipodes Attract
From Strange Maps, a blog documenting the cartographical oddities of the world, comes this chart of Earth’s prime tunneling locations [...] Imagine the disappointment of someone trying to dig their way out of Siberia and ending up in Antarctica.
Trackback by Topography of Ignorance — April 23, 2007 @ 9:00 am
[...] Antipodes Are All Wet Now this is cool. Strange Maps came across the Antipode Map. Your antipode (a Greek word translatable as: ‘those whose feet [...]
Pingback by Your Antipodes Are All Wet « Careful Thought II — April 23, 2007 @ 5:49 pm
Once I made a site where you can search the antipode of a location (uses google maps)
Comment by SztupY — April 24, 2007 @ 2:33 pm
The Latin word for fin is “pinna”. How you construct a word for that is your business.
Comment by wahoofive — May 4, 2007 @ 3:40 pm
If a fin is what a fish use to swim and steer(sorry but my English are poor) then the greek word you are looking for is “πτερύγιο” (pterighio).
Nice blog…
Comment by thanos2310 — June 12, 2007 @ 9:20 pm
Cool! The Philippines appear to be enirely antipodal to South America (mostly Brazil).
Comment by Arvin — June 13, 2007 @ 1:47 am
[...] 104 – Your Antipodes Most Likely Have Fins « strange maps (tags: strangemaps.wordpress.com 2007 at_tecp maps visualization China_Syndrome) [...]
Pingback by rascunho » Blog Archive » links for 2007-06-15 — June 15, 2007 @ 8:17 pm
[...] Wat als je een gaatje boorde door de wereld en aan de andere kant uitkwam? Dan kreeg je waarschijnlijk natte voeten! [...]
Pingback by Antipoden « A zijn — June 16, 2007 @ 1:08 am
I think that when I was young and thought about this, I didn’t account for the change in latitude, but only longitude.
Comment by Chris — June 19, 2007 @ 4:07 pm
Wow, for the person who loves map, I guess.
Comment by Phoenix Arizona Auto Home Life Insurance — June 29, 2007 @ 8:08 pm
Doing some calculations, I thought my antipod was somewhere in Thailand, but it seems that is actually some part of Indonesia near Jakarta, so I wasn’t so wrong.
Comment by POL — September 25, 2007 @ 1:46 am
Well, the Greek word for “fin” is “πτερύγιο”, that is “pterygio” in the latin alphabet.
Really nice blog, by the way.
Comment by plagal — November 16, 2007 @ 11:02 pm
Funny. I knew that New Zealand was around the antipodes of Italy, a strange coincidence due also to the similar shapes of the countries: both look like a boot, with NZ turned upside-down (or pointing towards the equator), and mirrored.
It turns out that NZ’s antipodes are in Spain, but not very far from Italy nevertheless :)
Comment by Funz — January 3, 2008 @ 9:57 am
[...] this is cool. Strange Maps came across the Antipode Map. Your antipode (a Greek word translatable as: ‘those whose feet [...]
Pingback by Your Antipodes Are All Wet | Careful Thought — February 15, 2008 @ 9:24 pm
I have never seen a map quite like this one. How fun to enplore when you need to get your mind off of work
Comment by Christian Debt Relief — September 16, 2008 @ 6:51 pm
http://y22icom.wordpress.com
Comment by y22icom — March 11, 2009 @ 9:19 pm
دردشة فله
Comment by y22icom — March 11, 2009 @ 9:20 pm
شات سودي
Comment by y22icom — March 11, 2009 @ 9:20 pm
شات
Comment by y22icom — March 11, 2009 @ 9:21 pm
For photos of some antipodal points go to
http://confluence.org/antipodes.php
BTW am I the only NZer who objects to being called ‘antipodean’. That’s the Spanish!
Comment by Murray — March 20, 2009 @ 9:53 am
مركز تحميل
Comment by y22icom — March 27, 2009 @ 6:36 pm
شات
شات
Comment by dsd — April 29, 2009 @ 4:39 pm
thanks alot
Comment by Tony — May 4, 2009 @ 2:44 am
thanks for this map.
good
luck
Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 7:34 am
thankx
Comment by برامج نوكيا — May 12, 2009 @ 8:20 pm
merci
Comment by aspicco . — May 17, 2009 @ 5:12 am
teşekkür ederim
Comment by yory — June 12, 2009 @ 8:49 pm
Vielen Dank
Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 4:02 am
Muchas gracias
Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 6:55 am