Even Oklahoma, if you start in far NW Arkansas and head south.
saotomeindiaunion7 on
Oklahoma’s border with arkansas is not straight
manicpossumdreamgirl on
if you go to the Northwest corner of Arkansas and travel due south, you will be in Oklahoma
mnmmatt on
there is a slight diagonal on the northern part of the arkansas oklahoma border
samwe on
First off, AK is Alaska and AR is Arkansas.
But if you look at the map you will see that every state that borders Arkansas has area south of Arkansas.
Fodraz on
Every state that borders AR can be crossed into going directly south from some part of AR. Louisiana obviously, but even Texas, Mississippi, and even Missouri have some point of it that South of somewhere in Arkansas. Even Oklahoma, for a minute bit!
Global-Fun2774 on
To every state *it borders*. So the state to the west, the northernmost section of their border is sloped so, if you start in the NW corner of Arkansas and go S, you’ll get there. The state to the north of it… if you go to the most northerly point of Arkansas and travel south… the state to the north hooks round underneath. Its eastern border is sloped so you can do it there too.
It’s kind of neat.
KoneydeRuyter on
The western border is bowed in a bit so you can travel from the northwest south into Oke
Ramikadyc on
Arkansas’ western border is curved inward. Heading due-south at the most northwestern corner of Arkansas will put you in eastern Oklahoma. Then potentially back into Arkansas later, depending on where you started and what kinda route you walked/biked/drove/flew.
bytor_2112 on
Rephrased: Each state that borders Arkansas has some part of it directly south of some part of Arkansas, which is very odd considering it’s surrounded on all sides. The little tail that Missouri has and the slight westward tilt over parts of Oklahoma make this possible.
Santanoni on
Did you look at the map?
Anything-Complex on
The border north of Fort Smith is at an angle, so that traveling due south from northwestern Arkansas will lead you into Oklahoma.
There’s also a very short (~300 foot) section of border near the Red River that is east to west oriented rather than north to south, and there may be a few other irregularities like that, where you can move south into OK from AR.
walkingshoes on
Jay Cuda is a maga chode
MauiNui on
What does this have to do with being landlocked? I don’t get the association.
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Doesn’t matter. But Trump had a stroke.
Even Oklahoma, if you start in far NW Arkansas and head south.
Oklahoma’s border with arkansas is not straight
if you go to the Northwest corner of Arkansas and travel due south, you will be in Oklahoma
there is a slight diagonal on the northern part of the arkansas oklahoma border
First off, AK is Alaska and AR is Arkansas.
But if you look at the map you will see that every state that borders Arkansas has area south of Arkansas.
Every state that borders AR can be crossed into going directly south from some part of AR. Louisiana obviously, but even Texas, Mississippi, and even Missouri have some point of it that South of somewhere in Arkansas. Even Oklahoma, for a minute bit!
To every state *it borders*. So the state to the west, the northernmost section of their border is sloped so, if you start in the NW corner of Arkansas and go S, you’ll get there. The state to the north of it… if you go to the most northerly point of Arkansas and travel south… the state to the north hooks round underneath. Its eastern border is sloped so you can do it there too.
It’s kind of neat.
The western border is bowed in a bit so you can travel from the northwest south into Oke
Arkansas’ western border is curved inward. Heading due-south at the most northwestern corner of Arkansas will put you in eastern Oklahoma. Then potentially back into Arkansas later, depending on where you started and what kinda route you walked/biked/drove/flew.
Rephrased: Each state that borders Arkansas has some part of it directly south of some part of Arkansas, which is very odd considering it’s surrounded on all sides. The little tail that Missouri has and the slight westward tilt over parts of Oklahoma make this possible.
Did you look at the map?
The border north of Fort Smith is at an angle, so that traveling due south from northwestern Arkansas will lead you into Oklahoma.
There’s also a very short (~300 foot) section of border near the Red River that is east to west oriented rather than north to south, and there may be a few other irregularities like that, where you can move south into OK from AR.
Jay Cuda is a maga chode
What does this have to do with being landlocked? I don’t get the association.