You may be thinking of the Antarctic Circle -- 66.5628° S.
All lines of latitude south of 60 degrees S cut through some part or all of Antarctica.
You can find Antarctica south of 60 degrees S.
The longitude lines cover the vertical side of the earth and the latitude lines cover the horizontal side. This gives you map coordination's.
The latitude of Antarctica is approximately 66 to 90 degrees South. All lines of longitude converge at the South Pole, so all lines of longitude pass through Antarctica. Antarctica is a continent covering 10% of the earth's surface -- about as large as USA and Mexico combined. Latitude and longitude imply specific locations, not general geographies.
Every parallel of latitude south of roughly 60.6° S crosses some part of Antarctica, and every latitude south of about 85.5° S is entirely on that continent.
The Northernmost tip of the continent is Prime Head, at the northern tip of the Trinity Peninsula at 63°12'48"S 57°18'08"W. The continent then, occupies all the lines of latitude at varying degrees to 90° S. The varying degrees are defined by an irregular coastline being measured by straight lines of latitude.
The latitude of Antarctica is approximately 66 to 90 degrees South. All lines of longitude converge at the South Pole, so all lines of longitude pass through Antarctica. Antarctica is a continent covering 10% of the earth's surface -- about as large as USA and Mexico combined. Latitude and longitude imply specific locations, not general geographies.
AnswerSome of the countries the polar regions run through are Antarctica, the Arctic, Greenland and some parts of Russia, including lines of latitude and longitude.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles. The Antarctic Circle is at 66 degrees 32 minutes S latitude. Most of the land mass of Antarctica is within the Antarctic Circle.
You can find Antarctica south of 60 degrees S latitude.
The lines that intercept latitude lines are lines of longitude.
It must, by definition, cover all lines of Longitude. In terms of Latitude it is further north than, say, 60 degrees.
Lines of latitude run parallel to the Equator (which is zero latitude).