Like most of the northern US, Colorado is closer to Spain than to Argentina, but it is very close. There is less than 100 miles difference in the distances Denver to Spain and Denver to northern Argentina.(Some southern locations of the US are closer to Argentina.)
Neither of them is 'close', but northern Argentina is less far.
Florida is closer to the equator than southern Argentina or any part of Spain is, although it's closer to southern Spain than it is to Argentina. But northern Argentina is closer to the equator than either Florida or any part of Spain. Southern Spain is also closer to Florida than it is to Argentina, but no part of any of them is as close to the Equator as Ecuador or Gabon is.
Germany is closer to Spain. Germany is in Europe, as is Spain. The distances are not even close.
Assuming that YOU were in either of those locations:Northern Argentina is closer to the equator. The latitude of the equator is zero. Latitudes increase as you move farther from the equator, both north and south.The northernmost point in Argentina is near 21.8° south latitude while the southernmost point in Spain is about 36° N near Gibraltar.There are Spanish islands closer to the equator, the Canary Islands, at 27.6° N, but even so northern Argentina is closer to the equator by about 6° of latitude.
Both Chile and Argentina, close to Antarctica.
Riverside, CA, is slightly closer to Argentina (the northern part) than to Spain (the western coast). But the distances are very close (both about 5500-5700 miles or 8850- 9200 kilometers).
If you mean the Cordoba in Spain, it's relatively close to the Granada in Spain (about 100 miles) but not the Granada in Nicaragua. If you mean one of the Cordobas in Argentina, Colombia or Mexico, they're not close to either of the Granadas.
No
No. Penguins are only found on the Southern Hemisphere, close to Antarctica. Countries where penguins can be found include Australia, New Zealand, Argentina and Chile.
The major bodies of water surrounding Argentina are the Pacific Ocean on the western side of the country and the Atlantic Ocean on the east side. The very southern tip of Argentina has no major bodies of water close to it except for the oceans I mentioned.
i dont know but i am a missionary in Ecuador close to Argentina.