Earth's North Magnetic Pole
			
		
		
			Credit:  
NOAA
		
		
			A magnetic 
compass does not point toward the 
true North Pole of the Earth.  
Rather, it more closely points toward the 
North Magnetic Pole of the Earth.  
The North Magnetic Pole is currently located in northern 
Canada.  
It wanders in an elliptical path each day, and 
moves, 
on the average, more than forty meters northward each day.  
Evidence indicates that the 
North Magnetic Pole has wandered over 
much of the Earth's surface in the 4.5 billion years 
since the Earth formed.  
The Earth's magnetic field is created by Earth's partially ionized outer core, 
which rotates more rapidly than the Earth's surface.  
Indicated in the above picture is 
Ellef Ringnes Island, the location of
Earth's North Magnetic Pole in 1999.