Mid-latitudes
"High" latitudes. The equator has a latitude of zero. The area between the Tropic of Cancer (at 23.5 degrees north) and the Tropic of Capricorn (at 23.5 degrees south) are the "tropics" or low latitudes. The "polar regions" are above the Arctic Circle or below the Antarctic Circle, where the latitudes are higher than 66.5 degrees (north or south) are "high". The areas between the tropics and the arctic/antarctic are called "mid-latitudes or "temperate zones".
The Arctic Circle is north of the Equator: the Antarctic Circle is south of the Equator.
The region between the Arctic Circle and the North Pole is called the Arctic region. The region between the Antarctic Circle and the South Pole is called the Antarctic region.
it is between the arctic circle and antarctic circle.
Opposite hemispheres.
Antarctic Circle
The Arctic and the Antarctic
No; neither of the tropics is a great circle. The only line of latitude that is a great circle is the equator. The arctic and antarctic circles are not great circles, either.
The Arctic Circle is north of the Equator; the Antarctic Circle is south of the Equator.
The major imaginary latitudinal lines on the earth's suface from north to south are - * the Arctic Circle * the Tropic of Cancer * the Equator * the Tropic of Capricorn * the Antarctic Circle
The temperate zone is the area between the polar areas and the equator.
The Arctic and the Antarctic respectively.