KRW Wrote:Actually Alaska is considered both the furthest west and the furthest east.:o
Here I go again. . . .
That depends on how you look at it.
In regard to east/west, the dividing point is Greenwich, England -- the zero point for Latitude and the farthest west is 180 degrees of Latitude, and from there (although you're still travelling west) you are considered to be on the eastern half of the planet.
The farthest west point of Alaska is Attu Island (in the Aleutians) which is 173 degrees west Longitude. So you still haven't reached the 180 degree point.
If you want to consider U.S. Territories, the eastern-most point is Point Udall, St.Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands (named after Stewart Udall who was a Congressman from Arizona, [1955 to 1961] and later Secretary of the Interior during the Kennedy/Johnson administrations. [1961 to 1969]) And the western-most point is Point Udall, Guam (named after Morris "Mo" Udall who was also a Congressman from Arizona. [1961 to 1991])
(Ain't geography fun.)
Ken V.