On what date do latitudes higher than the Antarctic Circle experience 24 hours of daylight?

Latitudes 'higher' than the Antarctic Circle -- latitude 66° 33′ 39″ -- all the way to 90°, experience at least one day per year with no sunset At the South Pole -- 90° -- there is one sunrise per year and one sunset per year. During the six months while there is no sunset, every day has 24 hours of daylight In these higher latitudes, the phenomenon of sunrise and sunset is remarkably different from the experience of sunrise/sunset in lower latitudes For example, in the six to eight weeks between the first sunrise and the last sunset, in the spring, the sun rises and sets at dramatically different points on the compass. This is at 77°, at McMurdo Station The sunset at South Pole takes most of the day, as the sun slips slowly around the horizon until finally, the orb is below the line that separates sky from earth.

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