So, the year is all
but over and that had me thinking about which country would be the first to see
in a new year and which would be the last. So, this is what I found out.
The place to see the
New Year first is Kiribati, specifically Kiritimati (Christmas Island) in the
Line Islands. Not to be confused with the Christmas Island that is a territory
of Australia and in the Indian Ocean.
The Line Islands
(also called the Teraina Islands or Equatorial Islands) are a
chain of 11 atolls and low coral islands stretching more than 2,350 km across
the Pacific. They lie south of Hawaii and are among the longest island chains
in the world.
Why is it the first
well it’s because it sits in the UTC+14 time zone — the earliest on Earth —
which puts it ahead of every other inhabited place when the first of January
arrives.
In 1995, Kiribati
shifted the International Date Line eastward so all its islands would share the
same calendar day. As a result, Kiritimati became the first inhabited place to
celebrate the New Year.
The last inhabited
place is American Samoa in UTC−11.
However, the very
last to see in a new year that would be Baker Island and Howland Island these
are uninhabited U.S. territories.
No comments:
Post a Comment