Weird Geography Facts

What is going on in these weird little areas?

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i live in the red area you have circled
my understanding is those weird jut ins are farmers or decrepit old coal mining homes of people who refuse to sell or be annexed by city


same people are fighting waukee/clive/urbandale on the expansion of alices road from 2 lanes to 4
 
The islands of American Samoa and Western Samoa are 120 miles apart, but have a time difference of 24 hours and are completely different calendar days. Kiribati Islands (straight south of Hawaii) is the first country to celebrate new years, but American Samoa is west of Kiribati and celebrates new years a full 24 hours later
Also interesting is that the International Date Line around Kirabati was moved in 1995. Before then, it passed through the area of the islands, which meant part of the country was 24 hours ahead of the other part.
 
Minnesota's Northwest Angle (part of Minnesota that can only be accessed by water from the US or by land through Canada) has a fun back story. It exists due to poor maps and a misunderstanding of the source of the Mississippi River at the time:

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Angle Township was designated as territory of the United States because negotiators of the initial Canada–U.S. border misunderstood the geography of the area. Benjamin Franklin and British representatives relied on the Mitchell Map of colonial American geographer John Mitchell, which did not indicate the source of the Mississippi River—thought to lie some distance to the northwest—or the true shape of Lake of the Woods, which was instead shown as roughly oval. The 1783 Treaty of Paris thus stated that the boundary between U.S. territory and the British possessions to the north would run "...through the Lake of the Woods to the northwesternmost point thereof, and from thence on a due west course to the river Mississippi..."

 
America is the biggest country on the planet and it’s not even close. Bigly.
 
Not too weird geography wise but I think a lot of people would be surprised with how much snow skiing/snowboarding can be done in New Mexico.
I'm always surprised when I see videos of people hiking in the Arizona mountains and it's below freezing, or at least close to it and there is snow. I've never been to Arizona, but I picture the entire state as being a furnace year round.
 

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