well it depends where the name is......otherwise, the coordinates that crosses the SAHARA is 20.6328° N~ 21, 11.2061°~11 E
Tropic of Cancer
Zero latitude -- the equator
A line can be drawn at any latitude. Any line in the range of 18.93° - 22.20° North latitude, or in the range of 24.52° - 37.53° North latitude, crosses territory of both the US and Africa.
-- The 15° North latitude line is completely in the northern hemisphere,and crosses the eastern and western hemispheres.-- The 15° South latitude line is completely in the southern hemisphere,and crosses the eastern and western hemispheres.
England occupies the range of latitude roughly between 50° and 55.8° north. Every latitude within that range crosses England, whether or not the publisher of any particular map or globe chose to print a line there.
Tropic of Cancer
No "named" line of longitude crosses Australia. The Tropic of Capricorn (latitude) crosses Australia.
Zero latitude -- the equator
which latitude crosses the bahamas
Tropic of Cancer
No "named" line of longitude crosses Australia. The Tropic of Capricorn (latitude) crosses Australia.
A line can be drawn at any latitude. Any line in the range of 18.93° - 22.20° North latitude, or in the range of 24.52° - 37.53° North latitude, crosses territory of both the US and Africa.
The latitude of the equator is zero. The imaginary line crosses the continents of Africa, Asia, and South America.
All of them between 11.958° south and 25.603° south do.
Sub-Sahara can also be said to countries that lie below the Sahara Desert and this is used as a demarcation line to signify that.
Any line of longitude (or of latitude, for that matter), that crosses the United States, will divide it in two.
The parallel of 15° South latitude crosses parts of the Eastern,Western, and Southern hemispheres.None of the conti9nents that it crosses is on your list.It crosses territory in Africa, Australia, Oceania, andSouth America, including parts of . . .AngolaZambiaMozambiqueMalawiMadagascarAustraliaVanuatuFrench PolynesiaPeruBoliviaBrazil