The Antarctic Circle -- 66°S 33′ 44″ - the latitude in the Southern Hemisphere south of which marks locations on earth that experience at least one 24-hour day and one 24-hour night each year.
The Antarctic Circle crosses Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.
Europe, Asia, North America, Arctic Ocean
Europe, Asia, North America, Arctic Ocean
At about 66 degrees S, the Antarctic Circle passes through the South Pacific, the South Atlantic and the South Indian oceans. South of 60 degrees S, all these oceans feed the Southern Ocean, which surrounds Antarctica.
At about 66 degrees S, the Antarctic Circle passes through the South Pacific, the South Atlantic and the South Indian oceans. South of 60 degrees S, all these oceans feed the Southern Ocean, which surrounds Antarctica.
The Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans are on the Antarctic Circle.Another AnswerThe Antarctic Circle touches the Southern Ocean, and is south of any other named ocean.
The Antarctic Circle -- 66°S 33′ 44″ - the latitude in the Southern Hemisphere south of which marks locations on earth that experience at least one 24-hour day and one 24-hour night each year. The Antarctic Circle crosses Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.
The sub-Antarctic is a region north of the Antarctic Circle in the South Atlantic, the South Pacific and in the South India oceans.
North of the Antarctic circle is basically what you see on the bottom of flat maps. The waters are called the South Pacific, the South Indian and the South Atlantic oceans.
The global oceans are divided by continental land masses into the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern (Antarctic), and Arctic oceans. These divisions are based on the geography of the Earth's continents and the interconnectedness of the ocean basins.
antarctica is the only continent that the antarctic circle crosses. im sorry if this answer is wrong as i was being very stupid and lame while i wrote it.
well if you only crossed the Atlantic ocean then it would be one ocean
7 continents and 5 oceans = 12