Extreme points of Earth
This is a list of extreme points of Earth, the geographical locations that are farther north or south than, higher or lower in elevation than, or farthest inland or out to sea from, any other locations on the landmasses, continents or countries.
For other lists of extreme points on Earth, including places that hold temperature and weather records, see Extremes on Earth, Lists of extreme points, and List of weather records.
Earth
Latitude and longitude
- The northernmost point on Earth is the Geographic North Pole, in the Arctic Ocean.
- * The northernmost point on land is the northern tip of Kaffeklubben Island, north of Greenland, which lies slightly north of Cape Morris Jesup, Greenland. Various shifting gravel bars lie farther north, the most famous being Oodaaq. There has been other islands more northern such as 83-42 and ATOW1996 but they are not confirmed as permanent.
- The southernmost point on Earth and the southernmost point on land is the geographic South Pole, which is on the continent of Antarctica.
- * The southernmost point of water is a bay on the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf along the coast of Antarctica about south of Berkner Island, the southernmost island in the world. The southernmost point of ocean is located on the Gould Coast ; the southernmost point of open ocean is also part of the Ross Sea, namely the Bay of Whales at 78°30'S, at the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf.
- The westernmost and easternmost points on Earth, based on the east–west standard for describing longitude, can be found anywhere along the 180th meridian in Siberia, Antarctica, or the three islands of Fiji through which the 180th meridian passes.
- * Using the path of the International Date Line, the westernmost point on land is Attu Island, Alaska, and the easternmost point on land is Caroline Island, Kiribati.
Elevation
Highest points
- The highest point on Earth's surface measured from sea level is the summit of Mount Everest on the border of Nepal and China. While measurements of its height vary slightly, the elevation of its peak is usually given as above sea level. It was first reached by Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Sherpa of Nepal Tenzing Norgay in 1953.
- The point farthest from Earth's centre is the summit of Chimborazo in Ecuador, at from Earth's centre; the peak's elevation relative to sea level is. This is because Earth is an oblate spheroid rather than a perfect sphere; it is wider at the Equator and narrower between the poles. Therefore, the summit of Chimborazo, which is near the Equator, is farther away from Earth's centre than the summit of Mount Everest is; the latter is closer, at from Earth's centre. Peru's Huascarán contends closely with Chimborazo, the difference in the mountains' heights being just.
- The fastest point on Earth or, in other words, the point furthest from the axis of Earth is the summit of Cayambe in Ecuador, at and from the axis. Like Chimborazo, which is the fourth fastest peak at, it is close to the Equator and takes advantage of the oblate spheroid figure of Earth. More importantly, however, it being so near the Equator means that the majority of its distance from Earth's centre goes into it being away from the axis. The importance of latitude becomes most apparent when one looks at the Challenger Deep compared to Mount Everest.
Highest points attainable by transportation
- The highest point accessible...
- *...by land vehicle is an elevation of on Ojos del Salado in Chile, which was reached by the Chilean duo of Gonzalo and Eduardo Canales Moya on 21 April 2007 with a modified Suzuki Samurai, setting the high-altitude record for a four-wheeled vehicle.
- * ...by road is on a mining road to the summit of Aucanquilcha in Chile, which reaches an elevation of. It was once usable by 20-tonne mining trucks. The road is no longer usable.
- * ...by road is disputed; there are a number of competing claims for this title due to the definition of "motorable pass" :
- ** The highest asphalted road crosses Tibet's Semo La pass at. It is used by trucks and buses regularly. The Ticlio pass, on the Central Road of Peru, is the highest surfaced road in the Americas, at an elevation of.
- ** The highest unsurfaced road is claimed by several different roads. All are unsurfaced or gravel roads including the barely passable road to Umling, LA, west of Demchok in Ladakh, India, which reaches , and Mana Pass, between India and Tibet, which is crossed by a gravel road reaching. The heavily trafficked Khardung La in Ladakh lies at. A possibly motorable gravel road crosses Marsimik La in Ladakh at.
- * ...by train is Tanggula Pass, located on the Qinghai–Tibet Railway in the Tanggula Mountains of Qinghai/Tibet, China, at. The Tanggula railway station is the world's highest railway station at. Before the Qingzang Railway was built, the highest railway ran between Lima and Huancayo in Peru, reaching at Ticlio.
- * ...by oceangoing vessel is a segment of the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal between the Hilpoltstein and Bachhausen locks in Bavaria, Germany. The locks artificially raise the surface level of the water in the canal to above mean sea level, higher than any other lock system in the world, making it the highest point currently accessible by oceangoing commercial watercraft.
- The highest commercial airport is Daocheng Yading Airport, Sichuan, China, at. The proposed Nagqu Dagring Airport in Tibet, if built, will be higher at.
- The highest helipad is Sonam, Siachen Glacier, India, at a height of above sea level.
- The highest permanent human settlement is La Rinconada, Peru,, in the Peruvian Andes.
- The farthest road from the Earth's centre is the Road to Carrel Hut in the Ecuadorian Andes, at an elevation of above sea level and a distance of from the centre of the Earth.
Highest geographical features
- The highest volcano is Ojos del Salado on the Argentina–Chile border. It has the highest summit,, of any volcano on Earth.
- The highest natural lake is an unnamed crater lake on Ojos del Salado at, on the Argentina side. Another candidate was Lhagba Pool on the northeast slopes of Mount Everest, Tibet, at an elevation of, which has since dried up.
- The highest navigable lake is Lake Titicaca, on the border of Bolivia and Peru in the Andes, at.
- The highest glacier is the Khumbu Glacier on the southwest slopes of Mount Everest in Nepal, beginning on the west side of Lhotse at an elevation of.
- The highest river is disputed; one candidate from many possibilities is the Ating Ho, which flows into the Aong Tso, a large lake in Tibet, and has an elevation of about at its source at. A very large and high river is the Yarlung Tsangpo or upper Brahmaputra River in Tibet, whose main stem, the Maquan River, has its source at about above sea level at. Above these elevations, there are no constantly flowing rivers since the temperature is almost always below freezing.
- The highest island is one of a number of islands in the Orba Co lake in Tibet, at an elevation of.
Lowest points
Lowest artificial points
- The lowest point underground ever reached was deep.
- The lowest human-sized point underground is below ground at the TauTona Mine, Carletonville, South Africa.
- The lowest artificially made point with open sky may be the Hambach surface mine, Germany, which reaches a depth of below sea level.
- The lowest artificially made point with open sky may be the Bingham Canyon open-pit mine, Salt Lake City, United States, at a depth of below surface level.
- The lowest point underwater is the -deep oil and gas well drilled on the Tiber Oil Field in the Gulf of Mexico. The wellhead of this well was an additional underwater for a total distance of as measured from sea level.
Lowest natural points
- The lowest known point is Challenger Deep, at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, below sea level. Only six humans have reached the bottom of the trench: Jacques Piccard and U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh in 1960 aboard the bathyscaphe Trieste, filmmaker James Cameron in 2012 aboard Deepsea Challenger, as well as Victor Vescovo, Patrick Lahey, and Jonathan Struwe aboard the DSV Limiting Factor in 2019.
- The lowest point underground is more than under the Earth's surface. For example, the altitude difference between the entrance and the deepest explored point of the Krubera Cave in Georgia is. In 2012, Ukrainian cave diver Gennadiy Samokhin reached the lowest point, breaking the world record.
- The lowest point on land not covered by liquid water is the canyon under Denman Glacier, with the bedrock being below sea level.
- The lowest point on dry land is the shore of the Dead Sea, shared by Israel, Palestine, and Jordan, below sea level. As the Dead Sea waters are receding, the water surface level drops more than 1 m per year.
- The point on the surface closest to the Earth's centre is the surface of the Arctic Ocean at the Geographic North Pole.
- * The closest point on the ground is the bottom of the Litke Deep, which is from the centre of the Earth. By comparison, the bottom of the deepest oceanic trench in the world, the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean, is farther from the centre of the Earth.
Lowest points attainable by transportation
- The lowest point accessible...
- * ...by road, excluding roads in mines, is any of the roads alongside the Dead Sea in Israel and Jordan, which are the lowest on Earth at below sea level.
- ** The lowest undersea highway tunnel is the Eiksund Tunnel, in Norway, at below sea level.
- * ...by train, excluding the tracks inside some South African gold mines, which can be several thousand metres below sea level, is located in the Seikan Tunnel of Japan railroad, at below sea level. For comparison, the undersea Channel Tunnel between England and France reaches a depth of below sea level.
The lowest railroad not inside a tunnel is below sea level, at Beit She'an railway station in Israel.
- The lowest airfield is the Bar Yehuda Airfield, near Masada, Israel, at below sea level.
- The lowest commercial airport is Atyrau Airport, near Atyrau, Kazakhstan, at below sea level, in the basin of the Caspian Sea.
Lowest cities
Remoteness
Poles of inaccessibility
Each continent has its own continental pole of inaccessibility, defined as the place on the continent that is farthest from any ocean. Similarly, each ocean has its own oceanic pole of inaccessibility, defined as the place in the ocean that is farthest from any land.Continental
- The most distant point from an ocean is the Eurasian Pole of Inaccessibility , in China's Xinjiang region near the border with Kazakhstan. Calculations have shown that this point, located in the Dzoosotoyn Elisen Desert, is from the nearest coastline. The nearest settlement to the EPIA is Suluk at, about to the east. A 2007 study suggests that the historical calculation of the EPIA failed to recognize the point where the Gulf of Ob joins the Arctic Ocean, and proposes instead that varying definitions of coastline could result in other locations for the EPIA:
- * EPIA1, somewhere between and, is about from the nearest ocean.
- * EPIA2, somewhere between and, is about from the nearest ocean.
- The continental poles of inaccessibility for the other continents are as follows:
- * Africa:, close to the tripoint of the Central African Republic, South Sudan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- * Australia: either, or, near Papunya, Northern Territory
- * North America:, between Kyle, South Dakota and Allen, South Dakota, United States.
- * South America:, near Arenápolis, Mato Grosso, Brazil
Oceanic
- The most distant point from land is the Pacific pole of inaccessibility, which lies in the South Pacific Ocean at, approximately from the nearest land.
Other places considered the most remote
- The most remote island is Bouvet Island, a small, uninhabited island in the South Atlantic Ocean that is a dependency of Norway. It lies at coordinates. The nearest land is the uninhabited Queen Maud Land, Antarctica, over to the south. The nearest inhabited lands are Gough Island, away, Tristan da Cunha, away, and the coast of South Africa, away.
- The title for most remote inhabited island or archipelago depends on how the question is interpreted. If the south Atlantic island Tristan da Cunha and its dependency Gough Island, which are from each other, are considered part of the same archipelago, or if Gough Island is not counted because it has no permanent residents, then Tristan da Cunha is the world's most remote inhabited island/archipelago: the main island, also called Tristan da Cunha, is from the island Saint Helena, from South Africa, and from South America. It is away from uninhabited Bouvet Island. However, if Gough and Tristan da Cunha are considered separately, they disqualify each other, and the most remote inhabited island is Easter Island in the South Pacific Ocean, which lies from Pitcairn Island, from Rikitea on the island of Mangareva, and from the coast of Chile. The Kerguelen Islands in the southern Indian Ocean are another contender, lying from the small Alfred Faure scientific station in Île de la Possession, but otherwise more than from the coast of Madagascar, northwest of the uninhabited Heard Island and McDonald Islands, and from the non-permanent scientific station located in Île Amsterdam.
- The most remote city...
- * ...with a population in excess of one million from the nearest city with a population in excess of one million is Auckland, New Zealand. The nearest city of comparable size or greater is Sydney, Australia, away.
- * ...with a population in excess of one million from the nearest city with a population above 100,000 is Perth, Australia, located away from Adelaide, Australia.
- * ...with a population in excess of 100,000 from the nearest city of at least that population is Honolulu, Hawaii, United States. The nearest city of comparable size or greater is San Francisco, away.
- * ...that is a national capital from the nearest national capital is a tie between Wellington, New Zealand, and Canberra, Australia, which are apart from each other.
- The most remote airport in the world from another airport is Mataveri International Airport on Easter Island, which has a single runway for military and public use. It is located from Totegegie Airport in the Gambier Islands, French Polynesia and from Santiago, Chile. In comparison, the airport at the Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station is not very remote at all, being located only from Williams Field near Ross Island.
Farthest-apart cities
- Rosario, Argentina to Xinghua, China:
- Lu'an, China to Río Cuarto, Argentina:
- Cuenca, Ecuador to Subang Jaya, Malaysia:
- Rancagua, Chile to Xi'an, China:
- Yantai, China to Tandil, Argentina: 19,965 km
- Salamanca, Spain to Lower Hutt, New Zealand:
- Marbella, Spain to Auckland, New Zealand:
Centre
- Since the Earth is a spheroid, its centre is thousands of kilometres beneath its crust. On the surface, the centre of the standard geographic model as viewed on a traditional world map is the point 0°, 0°, which is located in the Atlantic Ocean approximately south of Accra, Ghana, in the Gulf of Guinea, at the intersection of the Equator and the Prime Meridian. However, the selection for the Prime Meridian as the 0° longitude meridian is culturally and historically dependent and therefore arbitrary.
- The centre of population, the place to which there is the shortest average route for every individual human being in the world, could also be considered a "centre of the world". This point is located in the north of the Indian subcontinent, although the precise location has never been calculated and is constantly shifting due to changes in the distribution of the human population across the planet.
Longest lines between two points
Along constant latitude
- The longest continuous east–west distance on land is along the latitude 48°24'53"N, from the west coast of France through Central Europe, Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and China, to a point on the east coast of Russia.
- The longest continuous east–west distance at sea is along the latitude 55°59'S, south of Cape Horn, South America.
- * The longest continuous east–west distance at sea between two continents is along the latitude 18°39'12"N, from the coast of Hainan, China across the Pacific Ocean to the coast of Michoacán, Mexico.
Along constant longitude
- The longest continuous north–south distance on land is along the meridian 99°1'30"E, from the northern tip of Siberia in the Russian Federation, through Mongolia, China, and Myanmar, to a point on the south coast of Thailand.
- * The longest in Africa is along the meridian 20°12'E, from the north coast of Libya, through Chad, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Namibia, and Botswana, to the south coast of South Africa.
- * The longest in South America is along the meridian 70°2'W, from the north coast of Venezuela, through Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Chile, to the southern tip of Argentina.
- * The longest in North America is along the meridian 97°52'30"W, from northern Canada, through the United States, to southern Mexico.
- The longest continuous north–south distance at sea is along the meridian 34°45'45"W, from the coast of Eastern Greenland across the Atlantic Ocean to the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf, on the coast of Antarctica. The longest in the Pacific Ocean is along the meridian 172°8'30"W, from the coast of Siberia to the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica.
- The meridian that crosses the greatest total distance on land is still to be determined. It is likely located in the vicinity of 22°E, which is the longest integer meridian that fits that criterion, crossing a total of of land through Europe, Africa, and Antarctica. More than 65% of the meridian's length is located on land. The meridian that crosses Giza Great Pyramid is shorter.
- * The next six longest integer meridians by total distance over land are, in order:
- ** 23°E: through Europe, Africa, and Antarctica
- ** 27°E: through Europe, Asia, Africa, and Antarctica
- ** 25°E: through Europe, Africa, and Antarctica
- ** 26°E: through Europe, Africa, and Antarctica
- ** 24°E: through Europe, Africa, and Antarctica
- ** 28°E: through Europe, Asia, and Africa
Along any geodesic
- The longest continuous straight-line path over land is between Jinjiang, Fujian and near Sagres, Portugal, at.
- * The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Africa is, along a line that begins just east of Tangier, Morocco and ends east of Port Elizabeth, South Africa. This line passes through Morocco, Algeria, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Namibia, Botswana and South Africa.
- * The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Asia is, along a line that begins on the Indian coast near Kanyakumari and ends at the Bering Sea coast of the Chukchi Peninsula in Russia. This line passes through India, Nepal, China, Mongolia and Russia.
- * The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Europe is, along a line that begins at Cape St. Vincent, Portugal and ends at the Urals, near the town of Perm, Russia. This line passes through Portugal, Spain, France, Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Belarus and Russia.
- * The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental North America is, along a line that begins at Point Hope, Alaska, United States and ends southwest of the town of Salina Cruz, Mexico. This line passes through Alaska, Canada, Contiguous United States and Mexico.
- * The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental South America is, along a line that begins northeast of Puerto Cumarebo, Venezuela and ends south of the town of Punta Arenas, Chile. This line passes through Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil, Peru, Chile and Argentina.
- * The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Australia is, along a line that begins at the southern end of Cape Range National Park in Western Australia and ends at the town of Byron Bay in New South Wales.
- There are several possible candidates for the longest continuous straight-line distance in any direction at sea, as there are many possible ways to travel along a great circle for more than the antipodic length of. Some examples of such routes would be:
- * From the south coast of Balochistan province somewhere near Port of Karachi, Pakistan across the Arabian Sea, southwest through the Indian Ocean, near Comoros, passing Namaete Canyon, near the South African coast, across the South Atlantic Ocean, then west across Cape Horn, then northwest across the Pacific Ocean, near Easter Island, passing the antipodal point near Amlia island, through the South Bering Sea and ending somewhere on the northeast coast of Kamchatka, near Ossora. This route is long. This route was confirmed to be the longest given map data at a 1.8 km level of resolution.
- * From the south coast of Hormozgan province, Iran across the Gulf of Oman, southeast across the Arabian Sea, passing south of Australia and New Zealand, near the Antarctic coast, then northeast across the South Pacific Ocean, passing the antipodal point and ending on the southwest coast of Mexico somewhere near Ciudad Lázaro Cárdenas. This route is long.
- * From Invercargill, New Zealand across Cape Horn, then off the coast of Brazil close to Recife, passing north of Cape Verde, passing the antipodal point and ending somewhere on the southwest coast of Ireland. This route is long.
Along any truly straight line
By region
Afro-Eurasia
- Extreme points of Afro-Eurasia
- *Africa
- *::
- * Eurasia
- **Asia
- **:
- **Europe
- **:
The Americas
- Extreme points of the Americas
- *North America
- *::
- **Central America
- **:
- **The Caribbean
- **:
- *South America
- *::
Oceania
- Extreme points of Oceania
- :::
Antarctica
- Extreme points of Antarctica
Arctic
- Extreme points of the Arctic