Yes
the answer is southern hemisphere
The Tropic of Capricorn is completely in the Southern Hemisphere. In addition, half of it crosses the entire eastern Hemisphere, and the other half crosses the entire western one.
Very different then the Northern Hemisphere as far as constellations are concerned, but overall, very similar. Check out the star maps in the link below and you can compare them.
Jet streams.
In the Northern Hemisphere, the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west. In the Southern Hemisphere, the Sun rises in the west and sets in the east.
Weather generally in southern hemisphere moves from the west to the east. eg. Weather in Perth AU arrives in Adelaide AU 2 days later and in Sydney AU 5 days later.There are different circumstances if there is an offshore low or Cyclone off the East coast where sometimes it will move East to West but only until landfall where it dissipates after hitting the Great Dividing Range.
south and east
In the northern hemisphere, the pacific trade winds bring fronts off the pacific moving east.This usually provides for wetter or milder weather in the lowlands, but can be different than mild at higher elevations or east where polar fronts dominate weather.
New Zealand is in the Southern Hemisphere, as it is South of the Equator. It is also in the Eastern Hemisphere as it is to the East of the Prime Meridian. Longitude 170 East places it close to the International Date Line (180 degrees).
Cape Town is in the Southern Hemisphere. And also in the Eastern Hemisphere :}
The East Hemisphere, and the Northern Hemisphere
Wind
WIND.
There is no such thing as an eastern part of the southern hemisphere. East is a direction as is west Every thing is both east and west of a given point.
Yes because of the jet stream.
New Caledonia Is an island in the Southern hemisphere... to the East of Australia.
East Australian