No single land mass can have both a north and a south latitude.
It's one or the other.
Atlantic Ocean close to northern south america
Your answer depends on how you define region. South of 60 degrees S latitude, you can find the continent of Antarctica, which is 10% of the Earth's surface. North of 60 degrees N latitude, you can find parts of Europe, Asia, and North America. There is no land north of 83 degrees N. If 60 degrees is your measure, then the South Pole region has more land.
The coordinates at 40 degrees south latitude and 176 degrees east longitude are located in the South Pacific Ocean, east of New Zealand's North Island. This area is relatively remote, with no significant landmass nearby. The closest land is part of New Zealand, but these coordinates are primarily in open water.
yes
The closest land to Antarctica -- where you'll find the South Pole -- is the tip of South America, Argentina and Chile. Ushuaia, Argentina may be the 'inhabited place' closest to the South Pole It is 2,440 miles north of the South Pole.
Closest land I know of is Hereheretue atoll at roughly 145E 20S.
The South Pole (90 degrees latitude) is in the continent of Antarctic, at the south (bottom) of the World. The North Pole is (90 degrees latitude) at the north (top) of the World, where there is only floating ice and no solid land.
You may be thinking of the Sub-Antarctic Islands, some north and some south of 60 degrees S. (All land and ice south of 60 degrees S is governed by the Antarctic Treaty.) There are literally several hundred individual islands including the Crozier Island Group and the Auckland Islands south of 60 degrees, and the South Georgia Islands and the South Sandwich Islands north of it.
130 degrees north latitude does not exist because the maximum degree of latitude is 90, both north and south.
The biome closest to the North Pole is the marine biome, but the land biome closest to the North Pole is the tundra.
The tropics
That's in the ocean south of Tokyo. The closest land is Torishima Island.