None.
Those are the "polar" regions.
Those are the North and South Temperate Zones, respectively.
Only the Tropic of Capricorn passes through Bolivia. The Equator is located further north, the Tropic of Cancer is even further north, while the Arctic Circle, Antarctic Circle, and Tropic of Cancer are located far to the south.
The Tropic of Capricorn is located in the Southern Hemisphere, while the Antarctic Circle is also in the Southern Hemisphere. These geographical lines mark important reference points on Earth related to the positions of the sun and the Earth's axial tilt.
It depends where in those countries you were to take off in and land. It would be around 9,000 - 10,000 miles, though.
Your answer depends on where you are south of the Antarctic Circle -- 66 degrees S to the South Pole: 90 degrees S. There are 1,656 miles or 2,664 km between those two points of latitude. As well, it depends on the time of year, because the sunlight length every day is different. At the South Pole, for example, there are six months of sunlight and six months without sunlight. At the Antarctic Circle, there is one day -- December 21, with no sunset, and one day -- June 21, with no sunrise.
Inhabited settlements within the Arctic Circle include those on the coast of the northern two thirds of Greenland, portions of Norway Sweden, and Finland, the major city of Murmansk and a few Siberian towns in Russia, Kotzebue, Fort Yukon, and Barrow in Alaska, and several towns in northern Canada. Except for scientific research stations, there are no permanent population centers within the Antarctic Circle.
The line of latitude at 66 degrees 30 minutes south is known as the Antarctic Circle. This line marks the southernmost point at which the sun can be seen at its highest point in the sky during the December solstice. On this line, there will be one day per year where the sun does not set (during the summer solstice) and one day where it does not rise (during the winter solstice).
Two countries in South American have made claims on the Antarctic continent: Chile and Argentina. South Africa and Brazil are among the countries that do not have claims on Antarctic territory, but reserve the right to make claims should those rights ever be made available in future. The Antarctic Treaty holds all existing claims in abeyance and disallows any future claims. The Antarctic Treaty was signed in the 1960s.
Switzerland
These countries in Africa are the ones who have the equator passing through it. Those countries are Gabon, Congo, Dem. Rep. of the Congo, Uganda, Kenya, and Somalia.
Yes ... in places located at just exactly the right latitude between the Antarctic Circle and the South Pole. It happens every year in those places.