temperate zones
Australia has more than two climatic zones. It has wet/dry tropics, some wet tropics, arid zones, a small area of true desert, subtropical zones, and temperate zones as well. Two very broad zones are those of summer maximum rainfall, generally the north, and winter maximum, generally the south.
You would find it in the north tropics
North and south
"temperate"
The regions between about 23.5 degrees to 60 degrees, north and south, are often called the "temperate" zones. From 23.5S to 23.5N are the "tropics", the area between the Tropic of Capricorn to the Tropic of Cancer.
Australia has more than two climatic zones. It has wet/dry tropics, some wet tropics, arid zones, a small area of true desert, subtropical zones, and temperate zones as well. Two very broad zones are those of summer maximum rainfall, generally the north, and winter maximum, generally the south.
Koalas are only found in Australia. Within that continent, they are found from the cool temperate regions in the south to the tropical zones of north Queensland.
You would find it in the north tropics
North and south
"temperate"
The regions between about 23.5 degrees to 60 degrees, north and south, are often called the "temperate" zones. From 23.5S to 23.5N are the "tropics", the area between the Tropic of Capricorn to the Tropic of Cancer.
Africa, Asia, Australia, North America, South America have land in the tropics.
the second one
Africa, Asia, Australia, North America, South America have land in the tropics.
The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn are located at 23.5 degrees north and south latitude respectively, because latitude measures north-south while longitude measures east-west.
NO; it is in the temperate zones.
At the solstices.