No. At the end of December it is summer in the southern hemisphere.
The season that begins in the Southern Hemisphere is spring because it is never really cold except for at night when it's cool.
At that time, summer is beginning in the southern hemisphere.
December but its should feel like June
Summer
During northern hemisphere summer the sun is in the northern sky in the southern hemisphere. Our sun in the northern hemisphere is almost always in the southern sky unless your south of the tropic of cancer so this is why you have to reverse the sundials if you move to the southern hemisphere.
In June, it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere of Earth. So I'd assume that the Northern Hemisphere is closer to the Sun at that time, and that would probably occur because the North Pole is tilted towards the Sun during June. In fact, the Summer Solstice is in the middle of June somewhere.
Africa is located in both the Southern and Northern Hemisphere. If your very technical though its really in ALL the hemispheres! the earth is dived into hemispheres by the prime meridian and the Equator. Africa lies in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres almost equally. And while most of Africa lies in the Eastern Hemisphere, a small portion lies in the West.
An autumnal equinox is when the day is just as long as the night and the days are getting shorter. This happens in late September for northern hemisphere and in late March for southern hemisphere. It is different in the two hemispheres because of the Earth's revolution around the sun.
The sun is located in the exact position it was in any other season, it's the earth that moves.
The weather in November is cool in the Northern hemisphere, but November is warm in the Southern hemisphere.
No. Tornadoes almost always rotate clockwise in the southern hemisphere. Counterclockwise tornadoes are in the northern hemisphere.
The Southern Hemisphere is almost 90% sea, thus being a rather uninhabitable hemisphere - more so than any of the others.
During northern hemisphere summer the sun is in the northern sky in the southern hemisphere. Our sun in the northern hemisphere is almost always in the southern sky unless your south of the tropic of cancer so this is why you have to reverse the sundials if you move to the southern hemisphere.
No. Polaris is located almost directly over the north pole and so is never visible in the southern hemisphere. There is no corresponding star for the south pole.
It's in the northern hemisphere, and almost entirely also in the western one.
Australia is the only continent to lie only in the Southern and Eastern Hemispheres. Africa, Asia, and Antarctica are partially in the Eastern and Southern Hemispheres (in addition to the Northern for Asia, Western for Antarctica, and both for Africa). South America is almost fully in the Southern Hemisphere and Europe is somewhat almost fully in the Eastern Hemisphere.
Australia is the only continent to lie only in the Southern and Eastern Hemispheres. Africa, Asia, and Antarctica are partially in the Eastern and Southern Hemispheres (in addition to the Northern for Asia, Western for Antarctica, and both for Africa). South America is almost fully in the Southern Hemisphere and Europe is somewhat almost fully in the Eastern Hemisphere.
No, not at all. It is entirely in the Southern Hemishpere.
The United States is completely in the Northern Hemisphere, and ALMOST completely also in the western one.
No. China is in the Northern hemishere.China is actually in both the Southern and Northern hemispheres, as it is of an enormous size and is located almost directly in the center of Asia's main landmass.
The mighty Nile is in the northern hemisphere. The Nile River is almost exclusively in the northern hemisphere, because the upper half of Africa is above the equator. However, tributaries of the "White Nile" extend south of Lake Victoria into Rwanda, and are therefore in the southern hemisphere. (see map at related links)