Saturday, March 13, 2010

daylight saving time

The United States switches to daylight saving time:
The United States and much of Canada will move to daylight saving time from standard time on Sunday, when clocks will move forward by one hour.

Regular items transmitted from these countries will appear one hour earlier in terms of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).

In the United States, will be the eastern region of the time four hours behind GMT, will be the central region is five hours behind GMT, the Jebel Marra region of six hours and Pacific time zone seven hours behind GMT.

In Canada, and Newfoundland will go forward an hour and a half to two hours behind GMT. New Brunswick, Nova Scotia would be three hours behind GMT.

Ontario and Quebec will be four hours behind GMT. Manitoba and the Northwest Territories will be back to five hours behind GMT, Alberta to six hours and the Yukon, and British Columbia for seven hours behind GMT. Most of Saskatchewan does not observe daylight saving time, and will remain in six hours behind GMT.

Mexico does not move to daylight saving time until April 4. Will then be five hours behind GMT.

Clocks in Venezuela remains unchanged at four and a half hours behind GMT. In Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, and the hours and five hours behind GMT. Central America continue to watch six hours behind GMT. More from Brazil moved the clocks back one hour on February 21, making it three hours behind GMT.

More from Argentina were monitored for daylight saving time this year. Hours will remain three hours behind GMT. Chile back to standard time on April 3, making it four hours behind GMT.

The time changes will occur in most countries in Europe on March 28 as Australia and New Zealand on April 4.

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