- Palindromes at geographical extremes
Michael: I think the Inuktitut name for Thule, Qaanaaq, probably makes it the most northerly palindromic place-name in the world. And Udu Peninsula in Fiji is
Nov 19, 2001 @ 00:04 - Grant Hutchison ("Grant Hutchison" <granthutchison@...>)
- Re: [BoundaryPoint] Palindromes at geographical extremes
grant great observations & questions which i will undertake to answer definitively in due time southernmost might prove to be also a reduplicating pal in oz
Nov 19, 2001 @ 20:10 - m donner ("m donner" <maxivan82@...>)
- Re: Palindromes at geographical extremes
... No, Qaanaaq turns out to be well north of the North Slope (a bit like my home in Scotland - what English folk call The North is a couple of hours drive
Nov 20, 2001 @ 01:38 - Grant Hutchison ("Grant Hutchison" <granthutchison@...>)
- Re: [BoundaryPoint] Re: Palindromes at geographical extremes
... And Sutherland is to your north. It s all in point of view! -- Anton Sherwood -- http://ogre.nu/ (online again, Nov.19)
Nov 20, 2001 @ 06:33 - Anton Sherwood (Anton Sherwood <bronto@...>)
- Re: Palindromes at geographical extremes
... That s right. And from the above any right-thinking Scot can only deduce that the rest of the world has been built upside-down. Grant
Nov 20, 2001 @ 19:19 - Grant Hutchison ("Grant Hutchison" <granthutchison@...>)