Roughly 66.5 degrees south latitude.
Antarctic
The Line of Latitude you are referring to is called these Arctic Circle. The opposite line, 66.5 degrees south, refers to the Antarctic Circle. Areas with the Arctic Circle include the Arctic Ocean, Greenland, and the northern edges of Canada, Alaska, Russia, and Scandinavia.
The Antarctic Circle is a line of latitude -- about 66 degrees S -- beyond which the geography experiences at least one 24-hour period of no sunrise/ sunset per year.
Well one line of latitude is called the 'equator'.
If you mean north, you're talking about the Arctic Circle. If you mean south, you're talking about the Antarctic Circle.
Antarctic
You are thinking of the Antarctic Circle.
A line of latitude that runs through Antarctica is 66.5 degrees. The Antarctic Circle is the South region that includes the South Pole and the Antarctic Circle.
The Antarctic Circle.
The Antarctic Circle is a line of latitude that marks earth/sun events. There is nothing about it that can be, or has been -- invaded.
66.5 degrees south
The Antarctic Circle.
The Antarctic Circle.
The Antarctic Circle is a line of latitude -- which moves, according to the Earth's wobble. As of 10 March 2016, it runs 66°33′46.1″ as a line of latitude and crosses all degrees of E and W longitude on Earth.
a line of latitude or a line of longitude, the equator, the tropic of cancer, the tropic of capricorn, the arctic circle, the antarctic circle
The Antarctic Circle is about 66 degrees S.
The Line of Latitude you are referring to is called these Arctic Circle. The opposite line, 66.5 degrees south, refers to the Antarctic Circle. Areas with the Arctic Circle include the Arctic Ocean, Greenland, and the northern edges of Canada, Alaska, Russia, and Scandinavia.