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same as in the northen hemisphere The average time from the September equinox to the December solstice is about 89 days and 20½ hours.
61 days all of them
91 days
There is no precise definition of the start of seasons. Different countries adopt different conventions.
This is entirely dependent on WHERE you ask this question. In the Southern hemisphere, it would be fall going into winter which may be totally different than the spring/summer of the Northern hemisphere.
Autumn is three months long, from the autumnal equinox to the winter solstice. This will be from mid-September to mid-December in the Northern Hemisphere and mid-March to mid-June in the Southern Hemisphere. In terms of days, autumn can be considered to last either 91 or 92 days (one fourth of the year). In the Northern Hemisphere, autumn (fall) begins on September 22 or 23 and ends on December 21 or 22. In the Southern Hemisphere, autumn begins on March 20 or March 21 and ends on June 20 or June 21.
Well there are over 10000 penguins over in the southern hemisphere
Australia is below or south of the equator. That is its physical location. Anywhere south of the equator is in the southern hemisphere. So Australia is in the southern hemisphere, as are many places.
In some Southern Hemisphere countires, it's official that Spring arrives with September. That has the advantage that it puts winter's end at a time when the temperature is similar to what it was at winter's beginning (June. 1 in the Southern Hemisphere--December 1 in the Northern Hemisphere). But many have said that, in the Northern Hemisphere, April feels like the first Spring month. I agree. That corresponds to October in the Southern Hemisphere. By April, it's become warm and sunny, and there is sufficient sunlight to luxuriantly bring back the plant-life.
The world can be divided into two hemispheres: the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere. These are separated by the equator.
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