Yes, at about 66 degrees N.
You can find the Antarctic Circle about 23 and a half degrees north of the South Pole.
The Arctic Circle lies at about 66.5622 degrees North. The Arctic is the entire area from the Arctic Circle to 90 degrees North, or the North Pole.
The Arctic Circle 66.5° North. The North Pole 90° North. The Antarctic Circle 66.5° South The South Pole 90° South.
I'm not aware of anything special about 66 degrees 12 minutes north. The Arctic Circle is at 66 degrees 34 minutes north; that's only 25 miles away.
The Line of Latitude you are referring to is called these Arctic Circle. The opposite line, 66.5 degrees south, refers to the Antarctic Circle. Areas with the Arctic Circle include the Arctic Ocean, Greenland, and the northern edges of Canada, Alaska, Russia, and Scandinavia.
You can find the Antarctic Circle about 23 and a half degrees north of the South Pole.
The Arctic Circle lies at about 66.5622 degrees North. The Arctic is the entire area from the Arctic Circle to 90 degrees North, or the North Pole.
The Arctic Circle is 66.5 degrees north. The Antarctic Circle is 66.5 degrees south.
The Antarctic Circle is south of the equator.Southroughly 66.56 degrees south of it
The Arctic Circle 66.5° North. The North Pole 90° North. The Antarctic Circle 66.5° South The South Pole 90° South.
It is south of the Arctic circle.
The Arctic Circle is north of the Equator, and the Antarctic Circle is south of the Equator.
66.5622 degrees north and south respectively.
66.5 degrees north and south, respectively.
Lines of latitude at 66.5 degrees south and north respectively.
roughly 1834 miles south
No. The North Pole is the center of the Arctic Circle and the South Pole is the center of the Antarctic Circle. The Polar Circles are about 20-odd degrees from the poles.