Twice
no it hasn't
Yes. Australia is completely south of the Equator, and Mexico is completelynorth of it. No matter what route you choose to travel between them, theroute must cross the Equator somewhere.
washing their clothes, putting their waste in it??
just jump and duck and you will die a few times but just keep trying and you will get there
27
Twice.
Kinshasa
Africa.Because the equator goes through it whereas it doesn't go through the US.I guess you'd have to say that Africa is 'closer', because the equator crosses Africa but it doesn't cross the US.But it feels like there's something bogus about the comparison ... Africa is also more than 3 times the size of the US.
The nation of Zaire is now known in English as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The name has been changed several times. In the past it has been called the Republic of Zaire, Congo Free State, the Republic of Congo, and Belgian Congo. There was a time when the nation was divided in two and those two parts were known as Congo-Leopoldville and Congo-Brazzaville.
At the least, 13. It is easier to draw it out. The instructions are long and confusing and I will not write them...
Not at all. However, it depends on the place and the time of year you cross. The easiest place to cross would be at the mouth of the Rio Grande River near Brownsville, TX. There have been times that one could just drive across a sand bar at that point and right into either Mexico or the United States, depending on which country you were headed. This area of the river is watched very closely by boarder patrol, but there are times one could cross and you might not be noticed as there are periods where there are so many people wading at the mouth of the river you might not be detected crossing.Other areas further up the river are also places to cross, but some present a challenge.REMEMBER: IT IS ILLEGAL to cross the international boarder into the United States of America without going through U.S. Customs and Immigration. It is also illegal to cross from the United States into Mexico, even for a moment and only an inch inside Mexico, and then come back into the United States without going through U.S. Customs.
The equatorial radius of Jupiter is 71,492 kilometres ± 4 (over 11 times that of earth), so the equator measures about 449,200 kilometres