The Arctic Circle lies at about 66.5622 degrees North. The Arctic is the entire area from the Arctic Circle to 90 degrees North, or the North Pole.
In descending order:1) Pacific ocean (155,557,000 sq km)2) Atlantic ocean (76,762,000 sq km)3) Indian ocean (68,556,000 sq km)4) Southern ocean (20,327,000 sq km)5) Arctic ocean (14,056,000 sq km)
it is not mars is 6794.4 km in diameter where as earth is 12,756.28 km nearly twice as big
248,573 sq miles (643,801 km²)
9,984,670 km2 (total area).
55500km sq
The Arctic desert is 14.0 kilometers big. This the 5th largest desert in Asia.
It varies in size alot because of seasonal changes. 15 million square km in winter. 13-14 million square km in summer.
The Indian ocean is bigger (68,556,000 sq km), versus the Arctic Ocean (14,056,000 sq km).
The arctic ocean is 5,400,025 sq miles (13,986,000 km.)
14.06 million km²
The UK is a big place. Thurso, Scotland is 550.5 miles (886 km) due south of the Arctic Circle. To Plymouth, England, it's 1,117.3 miles (1,798 km). Looking at it another way ... on your trip from the Arctic Circle to Plymouth, you haven't even reached the halfway point yet when you enter the UK.
Big
it is somewhere
Ohio is a big place. The intersection of 6th St. and 3rd Ave., at the Post Office in Chesapeake, Ohio, is 1,943.5 miles (3,128 km) due south of the Arctic Circle. From the intersection of State Rd. and E. Prospect Rd. in Ashtabula, it's only 1,705.3 miles (2,744 km).
The sun is about 15,000 km big
The Arctic Circle is currently at latitude 66.5622°N. Stuttgart is at 48.7786°N. The distance from the pole to the equator along the same longitude is 10,000 km, so Stuttgart, Germany, is 1,976 km from the Arctic Circle.