Well, for one thing, every meridian of longitude crosses part of Antarctica,
and has one of its ends at the south pole.
Wherever the Antarctic Circle crosses land, the land is part of the continent of Antarctica.
You may be thinking of the Trans-Antarctic mountains.
The Antarctic Circle crosses Antarctica.
You may be thinking of the Trans-antarctic Mountains. However, anything that crosses the entire continent of Antarctica could be prefaced with the descriptor 'transantarctica'.
You may be thinking of the Trans-Antarctic mountains.
Transantarctic refers to something that spans or crosses the continent of Antarctica. For example, the Transantarctic Mountains are a mountain range that runs across Antarctica from the Weddell Sea to the Ross Sea, dividing the continent into East Antarctica and West Antarctica.
The equator crosses South America, Africa, and Asia. The IDL crosses only Antarctica.
Every parallel of latitude south of roughly 60.6° S crosses some part of Antarctica, and every latitude south of about 85.5° S is entirely on that continent.
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.
None. The only land that the Antarctic Circle crosses is on the continent of Antarctica. There are no cities, states, provinces, or countries on that continent.
The Prime Meridian crosses the continents of Europe and Africa, and has one end of it on Antarctica.
70 degrees north latitude . . . crosses parts of North America, Europe, and Asia.70 degrees south latitude . . . crosses parts of Antarctica.