67 degrees i think.
Do you mean the Arctic Circle? If so, it is north of the equator. Far North. I have not heard of an Atlantic Circle. There is a North Atlantic and South Atlantic Ocean.
Both polar regions: the Arctic and the Antarctic.
The aurorae are best visible from the Arctic and Antarctic Circles - and/or locations close to them. It's very rare to see the aurorae near the equator or latitudes as far south(or north) as say, Los Angeles.
You can experience this phenomenon beyond the respective circles -- 66.5 degrees of latitude. Depending on how far you are beyond the circles, the period of no sunset may be days, weeks or months.
The arctic and antarctic (too cold), and in deserts (no flowers).
It's roughly twice as far from the Arctic Circle as it is from the Equator.
Every point on the Trpic of Capricorn OR the Tropic of Cancer is about 2,608 km from the equator. Every point on the Arctic Circle or the Antarctic Circle is about 2,608 km from the north or south pole respectivly.
The Equator.
Antarctic
Arabian Sea is situated near equator. The places that are near equator those are hot and warm. Arabian Sea is the best example. The places that are far from equator those are cold and frozen. Arctic ocean (North) and Antarctic ocean (South) are its examples.Arabian Sea is situated near equator. The places that are near equator those are hot and warm. Arabian Sea is the best example. The places and Antarctic ocean (South) are its examples
Arabian Sea is situated near equator. The places that are near equator those are hot and warm. Arabian Sea is the best example. The places that are far from equator those are cold and frozen. Arctic ocean (North) and Antarctic ocean (South) are its examples.Arabian Sea is situated near equator. The places that are near equator those are hot and warm. Arabian Sea is the best example. The places and Antarctic ocean (South) are its examples
It is not East no matter how far you go. It is SOUTH of you. The Arctic is North of you. If you want to get to the Antarctic, you are going in the wrong direction.