The difference between the rain forest and the Arctic is that rain forests are tropical and warm and the Arctic is very, very cold.
The Arctic Circle marks an area north of the Equator, and the Antarctic Circle marks an area south of the Equator, where there is at least one 24-hour period annually of no sunrise or sunset.
Partially. The pressure difference between warm air near equator and cold air near arctic causes air to rise at equator travel north to arctic then down and south back to equator. The rotation of the earth bends that north-south belt - faster at the equator than at the slower rotation at arctic. The result of both is the jet stream.
The Arctic Circle is north of the Equator; the Antarctic Circle is south of the Equator.
The South Pole is on a continent -- Antarctica, surrounded by water -- the Southern Ocean. The North Pole is on the Arctic Ocean, surrounded by land.
The Arctic Circle is north of the Equator: the Antarctic Circle is south of the Equator.
Temperate Rainforests grows closest to the arctic circle
A beak that can dig into thick trees.
This will depend on where "there" is - the arctic, the rainforest, the desert, etc.
Rainforests require a considerable amount of rain which is lacking in the arctic and in deserts.
The rainforest is what we used to call the jungle. The sea is still the sea.
The Antarctic is a landmass: the Arctic is sea ice.
Because the desert is hot and the Rainforest is hot but the difference is that the rainforest has more plants than the desert
the difference is the plants the living creatures and the rain
Rainfall! The desert receives little and the rainforest receives copious amounts.
no
There is no difference. They are the same things.
There is the dessert and the rainforest. There might be the arctic but i can't be sure