There is a big range, depending on the type of inspection you are doing, and how quick you can work. It could be $25.00 per hour and could go all the way up to $$40.00 per hour. Over time can pay $ 35.00 to $60.00 per hour. There is alot of money to be made inspecting poles & collecting data.
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The Arctic Circle is an imaginary line on globes and charts at about 66.5°N latitude. Locations north of the Arctic Circle can experience at least one 24-hour period of "night" during the winter. At the North Pole, this becomes 6 months of daylight and 6 months of night. To "draw" the Arctic Circle, make a circle centered on the North Pole, about 2600 kilometers (1616 miles) in radius.
This should be fairly straight-forward. Let's see... we have: 60 Meter per Pole * 24 Poles per Minute = 1,440 Meters per Minute * 60 Minutes per Hour = 86,400 Meters per Hour / 1,000 Meters per Kilometer = 86.4 Kilometers per Hour (or approximately 53.7 MPH). Are we good? the fortistat of isobars multiplied by 34.98 inches divided by the barometric pressure on venus +456 cubic meters is the answer
That refers to the imaginary line, from the north pole to the south pole, around which Earth rotates.That refers to the imaginary line, from the north pole to the south pole, around which Earth rotates.That refers to the imaginary line, from the north pole to the south pole, around which Earth rotates.That refers to the imaginary line, from the north pole to the south pole, around which Earth rotates.
It depends exactly how long the shadow of the pole is... multiply whatever it is by 36/15 to get the answer.
North pole and south pole