2 Redditors used bread and math to turn Earth into a giant sandwich

The internet at its finest.
By Sam Haysom  on 
2 Redditors used bread and math to turn Earth into a giant sandwich
The exact moment the Earth became a sandwich. Credit: Etienne naude

You may not have realised it, but for a brief time a few days ago, you were no longer inhabiting the Earth. You were actually inhabiting a giant, rapidly spinning sandwich.

It all started when 19-year-old Etienne Naude, who's currently studying at New Zealand's University of Auckland, took to Reddit to make a rather unusual request in the r/Spain sub.

"I am wanting to make a thing called an earth sandwich," Naude wrote, before describing exactly what this would entail: "2 people at opposite parts of the world place pieces of bread at the exact opposite ends of the globe."

Reddit

It may have seemed like a slightly odd request to some, but Reddit was more than happy to answer the call.

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"I posted on r/Spain and got a bunch of responses, [and] from there I narrowed down who was in the region," Naude told Mashable. "We then used Reddit chat to organise the details."

Naude told Mashable that they made the sandwich mainly for fun, and to give themselves a challenge. The co-ordinates were worked out using the website freemaptools.com — a tool which calculates something called "antipodes" (points on the Earth's surface that are directly opposite one another) and then gives latitude and longitude co-ordinates based on this. Essentially, when they made their sandwich, Naude and his Reddit friend were connected by a line that would have run straight through the Earth's centre.

On Saturday, Naude posted the results of the experiment in Reddit's r/newzealand sub. At the time of writing, the post has over 7,000 upvotes.

Oh, and if you were wondering why there are nine slices of bread in the Spanish half of the image Naude shared, it's to guarantee accuracy. "Just in case we were slightly off," Naude explained.

Excellent work, everyone.

Topics Reddit

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Sam Haysom

Sam Haysom is the Deputy UK Editor for Mashable. He covers entertainment and online culture, and writes horror fiction in his spare time.


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