First observations The first group to reach the north magnetic pole was led by
James Clark Ross, who found it at Cape Adelaide on the
Boothia Peninsula on 1 June 1831, while serving on the second arctic expedition of his uncle,
Sir John Ross.
Roald Amundsen found the north magnetic pole in a slightly different location in 1903. The third observation was by Canadian government scientists Paul Serson and Jack Clark, of the
Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, who found the pole at Allen Lake on
Prince of Wales Island in 1947.
Project Polaris At the start of the
Cold War, the
United States Department of War recognized a need for a comprehensive survey of the North American
Arctic and asked the
United States Army to undertake the task. An assignment was made in 1946 for the Army Air Forces' recently formed
Strategic Air Command to explore the entire
Arctic Ocean area. The exploration was conducted by the
46th (later re-designated the 72nd) Photo Reconnaissance Squadron and reported on as a classified
Top Secret mission named
Project Nanook. This project in turn was divided into many separate, but identically classified, projects, one of which was Project Polaris, which was a radar, photographic (
trimetrogon, or three-angle, cameras) and visual study of the entire
Canadian Archipelago. A Canadian officer observer was assigned to accompany each flight. Frank O. Klein, the director of the project, noticed that the
fluxgate compass did not behave as erratically as expected—it oscillated no more than 1 to 2 degrees over much of the region—and began to study northern terrestrial magnetism. With the cooperation of many of his squadron teammates in obtaining many hundreds of statistical readings, startling results were revealed: The center of the north magnetic dip pole was on
Prince of Wales Island some NNW of the positions determined by Amundsen and Ross, and the dip pole was not a point but occupied an elliptical region with foci about apart on
Boothia Peninsula and
Bathurst Island. Klein called the two foci local poles, for their importance to navigation in emergencies when using a "homing" procedure. About three months after Klein's findings were officially reported, a Canadian ground expedition was sent into the Archipelago to locate the position of the magnetic pole. R. Glenn Madill, Chief of Terrestrial Magnetism,
Department of Mines and Resources, Canada, wrote to Lt. Klein on 21 July 1948: (The positions were less than apart.)
Modern (post-1996) The Canadian government has made several measurements since, which show that the north magnetic pole is moving continually northwestward. In 2001, an expedition located the pole at . In 2007, the latest survey found the pole at . During the 20th century it moved , and since 1970 its rate of motion has accelerated from per year (2001–2007 average; see also
polar drift). Members of the 2007 expedition to locate the magnetic north pole wrote that such expeditions have become logistically difficult, as the pole moves farther away from inhabited locations. They expect that in the future, the magnetic pole position will be obtained from satellite data instead of ground surveys. This effect is due to disturbances of the geomagnetic field by
charged particles from the Sun. As of early 2019, the magnetic north pole is moving from Canada towards Siberia at a rate of approximately per year. NOAA gives the 2024 location of the magnetic north pole as 86 degrees North, 142 degrees East. By 2025, it is predicted that it will have drifted to 138 degrees East (same latitude).
Exploration The first team of novices to reach the magnetic north pole did so in 1996, led by
David Hempleman-Adams. It included the first British woman
Sue Stockdale and first Swedish woman to reach the Pole. The team also successfully tracked the location of the Magnetic North Pole on behalf of the
University of Ottawa, and certified its location by
magnetometer and
theodolite at . The
Polar Race was a biannual competition that ran from 2003 until 2011. It took place between the community of
Resolute, on the shores of
Resolute Bay,
Nunavut, in
northern Canada and the 1996 location of the north magnetic pole at , also in northern Canada. On 25 July 2007, the
Top Gear: Polar Special was broadcast on
BBC Two in the United Kingdom, in which
Jeremy Clarkson,
James May, and their support and camera team claimed to be the first people in history to reach the 1996 location of the north magnetic pole in northern Canada by car. Note that they did not reach the actual north magnetic pole, which at the time (2007) had moved several hundred kilometers further north from the 1996 position. ==Magnetic north and magnetic declination==