Why are there cold and hot spots on a flat Earth? Without the notion of 'poles', why wouldn't we all have nearly identical weather (varying by elevation). Theory is that all the suns rays are 'parallel' and hit all of flat Earth at the same rate (very little variation because sun is so far away.) Antarctica elevation varies bet 2000 and 4500k meters (roughly). Ice and snow covered, with permanent snowcap. Appalachian mountains around 6000k meters. No permanent snowcap, melts every year. That would fall in line with a globe theory. With flat Earth, seems like the valleys would be the permanent cold spots.
Why are there cold and hot spots on a flat Earth? Without the notion of 'poles', why wouldn't we all have nearly identical weather (varying by elevation). Theory is that all the suns rays are 'parallel' and hit all of flat Earth at the same rate (very little variation because sun is so far away.) Antarctica elevation varies bet 2000 and 4500k meters (roughly). Ice and snow covered, with permanent snowcap. Appalachian mountains around 6000k meters. No permanent snowcap, melts every year. That would fall in line with a globe theory. With flat Earth, seems like the valleys would be the permanent cold spots.