The southernmost point of Antarctica is the true (not magentic) South Pole.
According to the Weatherbase Web site, the average annual temperature at the South Pole -- 90 degrees S -- is -55 degrees F.
That would be a point at the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, called Prime Head, at 63º13'S near 57º 00'W.
70 degrees South
Actually, Antarctica's latitude starts at 90 degrees South Latitude, with its northern most tip at 63°12′48″South Latitude. The Greenwich Meridian -- 00 latitude -- runs from the South Pole to the North Pole, so indeed, it does run through Antarctica.
The most northern 'line' of latitude is really a point. 90 degrees latitude north is the north pole.
No. Antarctica is the southern-most continent on earth. Parts of northern Canada are the northern-most land forms on earth.
The Antarctic Circle.
The South Pole is located on the continent of Antarctica at 90 degrees S latitude. The continental land furthest away from the South Pole might be northern most tip of Asia or perhaps North America.
False. Mexico is in the northern hemisphere. The "Antarctica Ocean", which is called the Southern Ocean, is in the southern hemisphere at 60 degrees S latitude.
You can find Antarctica south of 60 degrees S latitude.
Antarctica has no land in the northern hemisphere.
According to Wikipedia: "The northernmost extremity of the Antarctic mainland (without nearshore islands) is Prime Head, at the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula at 63°12′48″S 57°18′08″W. " Directly then, every latitude line between 63° and 90° South Latitude is covered by the Antarctic continent.
The middle latitude of the earth is the Equator (zero latitude), splitting the world into the Northern and Southern Hemisphere's.
The northern most part of the mainland. On the most northwestern side of the Continent.
The most northern latitude is 90 degrees north, at the north pole. The most southern latitude is 90 degrees south, at the south pole.