Technically, there is a very small difference, which can be measured with the appropriate sensitive equipment. But you could never feel it or measure it with a bathroom scale.
Australia and Antarctica are continents that are in both the Eastern and Southern Hemispheres simultaneously.
· Africa · Antarctica · Asia · Australia · Europe
They are both continents whose names begin and end with "a", and have an "i" in the middle. Much the same as America, I guess. Or Antarctica
Antarctica is exactly the same.
There are three continents that span the Eastern and Western Hemispheres: Europe, Africa, and Antarctica.
The Atlantic Ocean used to touch five continents: North America, South America, Europe, Africa, and Antarctica. However, now it only touches four (same above minus Antarctica) as scientists renamed the water around Antarctica the Antarctic Ocean.
They don't all live in the same place. All penguins live in the Southern Hemisphere, and live in Australia, Antarctica, Africa and South America.
Antarctica and Mexico are both lands.
Asia Africa Antarctica Australia Europe America Sorry... not able to remember the 7th one!!
The Eastern Hemisphere, the same as the name of the category this is placed in.
continents Continents: North America, South America, Australia, Antarctica, Europe, Africa and Asia (Europe, Asia and Africa are on the same land mass). Other landmasses include Greenland, Svalbard, Iceland, Indonesia and many other islands.
The largest deserts in the world are, in order: Antarctica in the continent of the same name Sahara in Africa Arabian on the Arabian Peninsula Gobi in China and Mongolia Kalahari in Africa Patagonian in Argentina and a small part of Chile