Selawik geodata
Selawik (Alaska) is a populated place; located in United States in America/Anchorage (GMT-9) time zone. With population of 859 people, there are 17293 cities with bigger population in this country. Compared to other cities in United States, 100% of cities are located further ↓South; 99.8% of cities are located further →East and 99.6% of cities have higher elevation than Selawik. Note1
Selawik on map:[1]
Selawik GPS coordinates[2]
66° 36' 14.004" North, 160° 0' 24.984" West
Map corner | latitude | longitude |
---|---|---|
Upper-left | 66.88152°, | -160.71007° |
Center: | 66.60389°, | -160.00694° |
Lower-right: | 66.32311°, | -159.30382° |
Map W x H: | 62.1×62.1 km | = 38.6×38.6mi |
max Lat: | 71.29058° ⇑0% North |
Selawik: | 66.60389° |
min Lat: | ⇓100% South 19.06759° |
min Long | Selawik | max Long |
-171.73463° | -160.00694° | -66.98998° |
W 0.2%⇐ | ⇒99.8% E |
Elevation
Elevation of Selawik is 1 m = 3 ft, and this is 293.8 m = 964 ft below average elevation for this country.
Max E: |
3189 m = 10463 ft | 99.6% |
Avg. | 294.8 m = 967 ft | |
Selawik | 1 m = 3 ft | |
Min E: |
-60 m = -197 ft | 0.4% |
See also: United States elevation on elevation.city.
Geographical zone
Selawik is located in North Frigid zone (between North Pole and Arctic Circle). Distance of this North polar circle is 4.5 km =2.8 mi to South.Distance of | km | miles | from Selawik |
---|---|---|---|
North Pole | 2601.4 | 1616.4 | to North |
Arctic Circle | 4.5 | 2.8 | to South |
Tropic Cancer | 4799.7 | 2982.4 | to South |
Equator | 7405.7 | 4601.7 | to South |
Nearby cities:
5 places around Selawik: (largest is in red/bold)
• Kotzebue
118.3 km =73.5 mi, 286°
• Noatak
167.2 km =103.9 mi, 310°
• Noorvik
52.1 km =32.4 mi, 300°
• Stebbins
359.1 km =223.1 mi, 197°
• Unalakleet
305.8 km =190 mi, 186°
Sources, notices
• [Note1] Compared only with cities in United States existing in our database
• [Src1] Map data: © OpenStreetMap contributors (CC-BY-SA)
• [Src2] Other city data from geonames.org with taken over terms of usage.
• [Src3] Geographical zone / Annual Mean Temperature by Robert A. Rohde @ Wikipedia